Kimi launches Slides with file import, PPT export and decks in under 60 seconds
Kimi Slides turns prompts or uploaded files into editable decks, then exports them as PPT or images with dense consulting-style layouts intact. Brand, sales and product teams can draft structured presentations fast and keep refining them in familiar slide tools.

TL;DR
- Kimi Slides is pitching a fast deck workflow: Hasan Toor's launch thread says it turns messy notes into investor-ready presentations in minutes, while the product demo in feature rundown shows topic-to-deck generation in under 60 seconds.
- The core workflow is broader than prompt-only generation. In feature rundown, uploaded files are auto-structured into slides, and decks stay editable online before export as PPT or images.
- Early examples lean hard into consulting-style presentation grammar. The prompt set in prompt examples asks for McKinsey, Goldman Sachs, P&G, and Deloitte-style decks with high information density, while EV market demo shows waterfall charts and 2x2 matrices generated from a single brief.
What shipped
Kimi Slides combines three pieces creators usually have to stitch together by hand: generation from a topic, document-to-deck conversion, and export back into standard slide formats. The demo in feature rundown lists instant generation, file import, editable online layouts, and downloads as PPT or image, and Kimi's own product page positions Slides inside its broader creation stack.
The import angle matters as much as the prompt box. In file import demo, PDFs, reports, research papers, and financial documents are uploaded and automatically restructured into slides, which suggests the tool is aimed at summarizing existing material as much as inventing new deck narratives from scratch.
What the outputs look like
The strongest early demos are not minimalist pitch decks; they are dense, analyst-style layouts. In EV market demo, a single prompt asks for a global EV opportunity analysis with high information density, waterfall charts, and 2x2 matrices, and the returned slides mimic the visual language of consulting presentations rather than generic template slides.
That formatting logic also extends to operational work. The planogram example claims Kimi generated a shampoo-category planogram deck covering 50 SKUs, shelf facings, and layout simulation with shapes and color intensity charts from one prompt. Together with the style prompts in prompt examples, the pattern is clear: Kimi Slides is trying to compress both slide design and business-visualization work into one step.