They call it a cloud CAD product, but that isn't really true in the same sense that something like OnShape is.This was possible in SketchUp, but only with fairly flaky physics plugins.įusion360 has been my daily driver for the last five years or so. Native support for modelling assemblies and joints.Fusion keeps a complete* history of each stage of development of your model, and allows you to travel back in time to revert or alter any step The UI was reasonably familiar to me (AutoCAD and Fusion360 are both Autodesk products).I shopped around for a while when I started looking at 3D CAD packages, and tried Creo, Inventor, Fusion360, SolidWorks and OnShape - before settling on Fusion360. I then learned 2D CAD with a couple different versions of AutoCAD. I started my journey in good ol' SketchUp, back when it was still a Google product. I've used a stack of different CAD packages over the years.