Divi builder
Divi builder
Divi. It was the Builder who made it possible for me to create a website the way I wanted, in 2014. Otherwise I would probably not have switched from Dreamweaver to WordPress at that time. Divi has been no longer a serious option for a few years. Old -fashioned, painfully slow, buggy and works with almost nothing. The old Divi only works well with Divi. All my Divi websites were converted years ago, first to elementor, later to Kadence (Gutenberg).
But … the new divi. I have already made a test several times with the upcoming Divi 5.0 version. Divi 5 is the next evolution of Divi’s visual builder, rebuilt from the ground, incredibly fast, with completely renewed onion. Indeed, it is no longer similar to the old Divi. I tend to give the upcoming version the status ‘serious Builder’ again. There is still something missing, such as CSS-Grid, column order on mobile, vertical lines, and not all options are available yet at the tablet and mobile view. But what I worked with was an Alpha version. Nothing beta yet, and it was already promising.
Advantages of Divi builder
Divi is only available as a paid version. You also have two choices: Divi or Divi Pro. The latter has considerably more cloud storage, add-ons credit and divi-ai. Keep in mind that you also pay an amount per year for the extra cloud services at the Lifetime Pro version.
Conclusion about Divi builder
I am still a bit careful, but I think the upcoming version 5 is a very serious builder. If this new version is finally off, we still have to test how this version deals with Gutenberg blocks and other plug-ins such as geodirectory and Learndash, but the prospects are good. Divi sometimes seems to be less, but it works very easily, making templates works perfectly, and it is one of the few builders where almost everything is possible in terms of WooCommerce. In addition, a huge range of (good) Divi add-ons is available.
Affiliate statement

Price Pro from €
