Why join UI/UX Design hackathons?
These challenges help you turn UI/UX design ability into concrete proof. Instead of only describing skills, you can show how you interpret a brief, make tradeoffs, and ship a finished submission.
Find live UI/UX design challenges from Wooble and partner teams. Each listing is built around real work, so your submission can become a stronger portfolio case study.
4 public challenges currently available in this domain.
Using the approved problem framing from step 1, design the task flow and screen structure for the user journey you want to improve. Define the sequen…
Explore UI/UX Design briefTurn the approved wireframes into a polished high-fidelity interface. Focus on visual hierarchy, typography, spacing, states, consistency, and usabil…
Explore UI/UX Design briefPackage the full project into one presentable industry-facing case study. This final submission should show the problem, process, decisions, final so…
Explore UI/UX Design briefConvert your approved flow into low-fidelity wireframes. Focus on hierarchy, layout, content grouping, interaction order, and task completion logic b…
Explore UI/UX Design briefThese challenges help you turn UI/UX design ability into concrete proof. Instead of only describing skills, you can show how you interpret a brief, make tradeoffs, and ship a finished submission.
Each listing focuses on practical work: prototypes, technical solutions, research artifacts, systems, campaigns, or analysis depending on the brief. The strongest entries make the problem, process, and outcome easy to inspect.
Wooble challenges are reviewed around execution quality, clarity, relevance to the prompt, and portfolio value. That makes the work useful for discovery by teams looking for evidence beyond resume keywords.
Wooble hackathons are built for professionals, students, and early-career builders who want to prove practical UI/UX design skills through real briefs.
Each brief defines its own submission requirements. Strong entries usually include a working artifact, a clear explanation of decisions, and enough context for reviewers to judge the work.
Submissions are evaluated against the challenge criteria, practical execution, clarity, and portfolio value. The goal is to reward shipped work, not just resume keywords.