Sure thing, always glad to talk more about how we’re all trying to solve this whole design tool problem.
Yeah, I’d say it would depend on what you’re looking to make. I’ve been using Webflow for a long time now, so it’s pretty quick for me to use, but there are situations where it can’t quite get everything that I’m driving towards, but those are usually in situations where I need more complex logic or the ability to use variables. Ecommerce might run into those situations a bit. I can imagine that it would be hard to use it for prototypes, as simple actions like a specific item to a cart would have a lot of permutations. I think it’s always been a benefit though, so I’d say give it a try. I just always tell devs “Don’t use my code, just look at how it works”. I’d never meet the muster of anything beyond a static website quality, but I’m not dealing directly with CSS anyways, just representing angular controls. You might actually be able to reuse what you make in production. Who knows?
Anyways, good luck!