
-2. Variable fonts are supported with direct control over axes (usually shown as sliders and number inputs). Many design apps now allow for this, including Figma, Sketch, and Adobe’s Photoshop, InDesign, and Illustrator apps. [v-fonts.com/support](http://v-fonts.com/support) actively maintains a list of supporting software.
+2. Variable fonts are supported with direct control over axes (usually shown as sliders and number inputs). Many design apps now allow for this, including Figma, Sketch, Affinity, and Adobe’s Photoshop, InDesign, and Illustrator apps. [v-fonts.com/support](http://v-fonts.com/support) actively maintains a list of supporting software.

-3. Variable fonts are presented as a set of static fonts. In this case, we can’t set any axis value, but we can access the named [instances](/glossary/instance). Current examples include Apple’s Keynote, Numbers, and Pages apps, and Microsoft’s Word and Powerpoint. In Affinity’s suite of apps, variable fonts’ metrics remain at their default values, which means they’re currently unusable.
+3. Variable fonts are presented as a set of static fonts. In this case, we can’t set any axis value, but we can access the named [instances](/glossary/instance). Current examples include Apple’s Keynote, Numbers, and Pages apps, and Microsoft’s Word and Powerpoint.
4. Variable fonts are occasionally not supported at all, in which case only the default style can be used.