Bubble Developers — I built something FREE that will save you HOURS!
Ever wished you could SEE your entire Bubble database in one clean visual?
If you’ve ever struggled to understand your Bubble database, plan new features, or onboard a new teammate… This tool is for you.
Introducing BirdEye Schema
A 100% FREE, open-source database visualizer for Bubble apps.
It instantly turns your entire Bubble database into a clean, interactive diagram — no setup, no headache.
@Nakita UI is very simple, you past your app url it layout all you database, how each table is linking even a single field. very usefull for understanding a database flow.
You can select a table and see where it was being linked. you can select a field and see which take its coming from.
I say very usefull for even large DB, as if a new dev come, just clicking a Field whill give him a bird eye view , who is the parent and how the data are bieng flow.
it’s great to see your thoughtful and constructive engagement with feedback—this kind of openness from a maker really stands out. I wanted to clarify and share some detailed observations based on my experience using Birdeye, along with a few suggestions that may help strengthen the product further.
In Birdeye’s current experience, once a user interacts with or focuses on a specific table, the interface moves into a narrowed view. However, returning to the original state—where all tables are visible—is not immediately obvious unless the user notices the reset button in the left corner. This interaction pattern can feel unintuitive, especially for first-time users, and may benefit from clearer visual cues or a more discoverable reset mechanism. Additionally, the absence of configurable layout options such as horizontal, vertical, stacked, or split views limits how users can explore and understand complex data relationships.
The tools available in the right-hand toolbar are useful, but without tooltips, it can be difficult for users to quickly understand each action. From a UX standpoint, keeping primary controls closer to the user’s natural focus area—such as a bottom-aligned toolbar similar to where the coffee cup and WhatsApp buttons appear—could significantly improve accessibility and reduce friction. Given that many existing tools in this space already offer more advanced layout controls and refined user experiences, enhancing Birdeye’s layout flexibility and UX polish would help it compete more strongly. One particularly commendable feature is the Snapshot functionality, which works very well and adds clear value; extending this with an export-to-PDF option would make it even more practical for sharing, documentation, and reporting.
Suggested improvements:
Make the reset action more visible and intuitive to restore the full multi-table view.
Add configurable layout options (horizontal, vertical, stacked, split) for better data exploration.
Introduce tooltips for all toolbar actions to improve discoverability and onboarding.
Reposition or duplicate key controls closer to the main interaction area, such as a bottom toolbar.
Refine overall UX consistency to better support first-time and non-technical users.
Opening large (Really large with 100+ tables) DB’s in darkmode ends in barely visible tables on the initial view
Potential new features:
Export snapshots or current views to PDF.
Save and recall custom layouts for repeated use cases.
Optional guided hints or walkthroughs for core interactions.
Overall, Birdeye already has a strong foundation and a very promising concept. With incremental UX improvements and a few well-chosen feature additions, it has the potential to become a highly polished and user-friendly tool for database visualisation.