
Moodr started as a joke, a moodboard that worked like Tinder, put together in a few days with v0 and Cursor. It was fun to use, but the more references we gathered for our own projects, the clearer it became that the tool we actually wanted was a different one. So we rebuilt Moodr from the ground up, into a real tool for the way designers collect and shape inspiration.
The new Moodr begins with a list of links. You paste in the sites you have been saving, and Moodr captures each one as a full-page screenshot with its title, description, and a short summary, so a board fills itself out in about the time it takes to gather the URLs. The captures are stored rather than borrowed, which means a board you build today still looks the same many months from now, and you can group sites into sections and reorder them as a direction starts to emerge, turning a loose pile of bookmarks into something you can read at a glance.
From there you can sync a finished board straight into Figma, where each section becomes a frame and every site lands as a labeled screenshot, ready to sit beside the work in progress. And because design decisions are rarely made alone, Moodr is built around teams, with boards inside projects and projects inside teams, so you can invite collaborators at the right level of access, clients included. That was the spirit of the original joke all along, making design decisions with clients a little less painful, and this time we built the tool to actually do it.
Try Moodr