SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Mar 24, 2026--
Spline, the platform for interactive 2D and 3D motion design, today announced the launch of Omma, a new AI canvas for creativity. This will empower anyone to build interactive digital experiences through natural language prompts in minutes instead of weeks, without prior experience. With Omma, teams can add interaction and motion to their brand, marketing, and product, then ship instantly. No steep learning curve required to add motion design and 3D.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260324015254/en/
“Designers have become builders. They are no longer stuck in the ideation stage prototyping and handing off to developers. With Omma, design concepts can be shipped as real interactive product experiences with rapid iteration through a conversational interface,” said Caroline Mack, Cofounder & COO at Spline. “Omma is as close to magic as it's ever felt to build digital experiences.”
Designers are Builders
Design is evolving from iterating, prototyping, and handing off for development, into a future workflow which is conversational and production ready at all times. Designers and their teams are becoming builders.
Leading design teams are moving quickly away from traditional workflows that rely on fragmented design systems, towards platforms that enable them to take an idea into production in minutes. They are iterating on the real experience rather than being confined to working on a mockup or prototype. This is streamlining and simplifying feedback loops with other teams, especially reducing workflow friction with developer and marketing teams.
Over 3 million designers and their teams have already relied on Spline to lean into production-ready, real-time workflows for 2D motion design, animation, and 3D design. Teams are moving away from manual processes that took weeks to go from idea to production ready, towards platforms that enable this workflow in minutes.
The next wave of AI-enabled design
Omma is the latest evolution in building and designing digital products. Spline has built a platform that turns a rough idea into an editable, production-ready design in minutes. Anyone can steer the output with simple feedback loops and Omma will adapt while staying aligned with your brand rules and design systems. Creating real products that harness motion design, interaction, and 3D is now a few prompts away.
Unlike existing tools, Omma unifies 3D, motion, animation, and UI into a single natural language workflow with a visual editor, producing functional, interactive experiences that can be shipped into production in minutes.
Omma harnesses the power of Spline’s existing editor to give creators complete editing control over generated assets. Leveraging Spline’s existing runtime and native export options across web, mobile, and XR - every Omma generated experience can be shipped fully cross-platform.
“What makes Omma a true game changer is flexibility,” said Alejandro Leon, Founder & CEO of Spline. “Creators can fully generate interactive motion design through natural language prompts, or leverage Spline’s native editing tools for precise control over the final output. Professional teams need speed during ideation without sacrificing production quality. With Omma, you can move from prompt to polished product output seamlessly - whether that means continuing to iterate with AI, refining with hands-on editing tools, or combining both.”
Pricing & availability
Omma is available Tuesday, March 24th via https://omma.build/.
Pricing starts at $29 /month for the Professional plan, with the option to purchase additional credits or to purchase the Enterprise plan. For Enterprise, please contact enterprise@spline.design to request a demo.
Supporting assets
About Spline
Spline is a category-leading platform for interactive, multidimensional design. With multiple browser-based products - including Hana for 2D motion design, Spline for real-time 3D, and now Omma for generated experiences - the platform is supercharging design teams to build production ready interactive experiences for web, mobile, and XR devices. All with no code and no prior experience needed. Founded in 2020, Spline is based in San Francisco, California and is used by millions of designers including teams at companies like Google, Datadog, Robinhood, UPS, and more.
Adjust, iterate, edit, and watch your ideas come to life. Omma turns simple inputs into dynamic, production-ready motion design.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Minnesota officials sued the Trump administration on Tuesday for access to evidence they say they need to independently investigate three shootings by federal officers, including the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti.
The lawsuit claims that the federal government reneged on its promise to cooperate with state investigations after the surge of federal law enforcement in Minneapolis, and are seeking a court order demanding that the Trump administration comply.
“We are prepared to fight for transparency and accountability that the federal government is desperate to avoid,” Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty told reporters.
The lawsuit marks an escalation in the clash between Minnesota leaders and the Trump administration over the investigations into the high-profile shootings by federal officers that sparked public outcry and protests. The Trump administration has suggested that Minnesota officials don’t have jurisdiction to investigate, but state officials insist they need to conduct their own probes because they don’t trust the federal government to investigate itself.
“There has to be an investigation any time a federal agent or a state agent takes the life of a person in our community,” Moriarty said.
The administration sent thousands of officers to the Minneapolis and St. Paul area for the immigration crackdown as part of President Donald Trump’s national deportation campaign. The Department of Homeland Security considered its largest immigration enforcement operation ever a success but was staunchly criticized by Minnesota’s leaders who raised questions over officers’ conduct.
There continues to be fallout from Operation Metro Surge in the form of a Homeland Security shutdown, as Democrats in Congress hold up funding in an effort to secure restraints on Trump's immigration agenda.
Minnesota's lawsuit said the federal government is not permitted to “withhold investigative evidence for the purpose of shielding law enforcement officers from scrutiny where a State is investigating serious potential violations of its criminal laws, targeting its citizens, within its borders.”
Moriarty said Tuesday that the federal government “has adopted a policy of categorically withholding evidence,” calling the practice unprecedented and alarming. She said the lawsuit followed formal demands for evidence after the federal government blocked Minnesota investigators from accessing evidence related to the shootings.
In addition to the Pretti and Good cases, the lawsuit demands access to evidence in the case of Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis, who was shot and wounded in his right thigh by a federal agent in January.
Federal officials initially accused Sosa-Celis and another man of beating an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer with a broom handle and a snow shovel. But federal prosecutors later dropped all charges against the men and authorities opened a criminal investigation into whether two immigration officers lied under oath about the shooting.
Emails seeking comment were sent to DHS and the Justice Department.
The Justice Department in January said it was opening a federal civil rights investigation into Pretti’s killing but has said a similar federal probe was not warranted in the killing of Good. The decision in Good’s case marked a sharp departure from past administrations, which moved quickly to investigate shootings of civilians by law enforcement officials for potential civil rights offenses.
Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche has said that the department’s Civil Rights Division does not investigate every law enforcement shooting and that there have to be circumstances and facts that “warrant an investigation.”
Moriarty has said a lack of confidence in the federal government’s review of these incidents makes the state’s independent investigations into the shootings, as well as officers’ actions during the immigration enforcement operation altogether, especially important. The county office received over 1,000 tips from the public on the shootings of Good and Pretti via an online portal they opened to collect evidence. Earlier this month, Moriarty initiated a second portal and said her office was investigating a number of incidents of potentially unlawful action by officers over the course of the immigration enforcement operation.
Fingerhut reported from Des Moines, Iowa.
Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty speaks during a news conference at the Hennepin County Government Center on Aug. 14, 2025, in Minneapolis. (Renée Jones Schneider/Star Tribune via AP, File)