Skip the HTML-to-PPTX conversion — present and share the HTML directly

HTML decks from Lovable, Claude and v0 look great in the browser and fall apart the moment you push them through an HTML-to-PPTX converter. Fonts go missing, gradients flatten, slides clip, layouts break. Artefact removes the conversion step entirely — upload the HTML, share one link for review, and present full screen from the original HTML at full fidelity. No .pptx, nothing to break.

You don't need to convert HTML to PPTX. Upload the HTML deck to Artefact, share a link for feedback, and present full screen straight from the browser — same fidelity as the original, no broken fonts, no clipped slides, no PowerPoint required.

DemoFixing HTML-to-PPTX export issues with Artefact

Why HTML-to-PPTX conversion keeps breaking

Every browser-to-PowerPoint converter has the same problems: it screenshots at the wrong viewport, misses the web fonts that make the design work, drops CSS gradients, background images and shadows, and splits slides on whatever element it can guess at. The output looks nothing like the HTML you started with. The fix isn't another converter — it's not converting in the first place.

Share and collaborate on the HTML natively

Upload the HTML once and send a single Artefact share link. Reviewers open it in the browser, drop pinned comments and annotations directly onto the live page, and discuss the deck where it lives. Add a password, control versions, and keep one source of truth — no second PPTX copy drifting out of sync with the original.

Present full screen from the HTML itself

Launch presentation mode in Artefact and the original HTML plays full screen at the exact fidelity it was designed for. Comment bubbles, annotation pins and overlays are hidden automatically for both the owner and recipients, so the live HTML feels like a finished, polished deck. PPTX export was always a workaround for not being able to present HTML cleanly — Artefact removes the need for the workaround.

How to skip HTML-to-PPTX conversion with Artefact

  1. Upload your HTML deck. Drop the .html file from Lovable, Claude, v0, or hand-written into Artefact. It renders at full fidelity in a sandboxed viewer — fonts, gradients, background images, all intact.
  2. Share a link instead of a .pptx. Send one Artefact share link. Reviewers open it in the browser and leave pinned comments and annotations directly on the page — no PowerPoint round-trip, no second file drifting from the source.
  3. Present full screen from the HTML. Launch presentation mode straight from Artefact. The original HTML plays full screen at native fidelity, with collaboration overlays (comments, pins, annotations) automatically hidden for both you and recipients.

Frequently asked questions

Does Artefact convert HTML to PPTX?+

No — and that's the point. Artefact removes the need to convert. Upload the HTML once, share a link for review, and present full screen from the original HTML at native fidelity. No PPTX export means nothing breaks in translation.

Why do my AI-generated HTML decks break when I export to PPTX?+

Converters screenshot the page at the wrong viewport, miss web fonts, drop CSS gradients and background images, and split slides on the wrong elements. The result barely resembles the original. The fix isn't a better converter — it's removing the conversion step entirely and sharing the HTML as-is.

Can I present full screen without exporting to PowerPoint?+

Yes. Artefact's presentation mode plays the original HTML full screen at the fidelity it was built for. Collaboration UI — pinned comments, annotation pins, comment bubbles — is hidden automatically in presentation mode for both the owner and recipients, so the live HTML looks exactly like a finished deck.

How do reviewers comment on the deck without PowerPoint?+

They open the Artefact share link in any browser and drop pinned comments and annotations directly onto the live HTML. Threaded feedback stays attached to the page — no .pptx round-trip, no screenshots pasted into Slack.

What if a client insists on a .pptx file?+

Artefact is built around native HTML sharing and full-screen presentation — the share link is the deliverable. For audiences that genuinely need a PowerPoint file, you can still run a conventional converter against the same HTML, but for review and presenting, the Artefact link removes the breakage entirely.

Share your first HTML deck

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