V1 vs V2 Comparison

V1 provides a basic watchlist screening experience with minimal status feedback and limited customization.

V2 improves the watchlist screening experience with clearer processing and success states, better visual feedback, and alignment with the token-based design system.

V1 is a basic watchlist experience with limited guidance.


V2 delivers a more structured, guided, and branded Advanced signature experience.




Feature Comparison

Functional capabilities of the module (objective features only; no UX or performance differences).

CapabilitiesV1V2Notes
Watchlist FunctionalityCore functionality present in both versions.
Customization optionsV1 provides limited customization options, while V2 allows full control over text, colors, buttons, illustrations, and behavior.
Documentation completenessV2 provides complete, standardized documentation coverage.



Behavior Differences

How the module behaves during runtime.


BehaviorV1V2Notes
State transitionsDefault transitionsSpecifically designed screen-by-screen transitions for smoothnessV2 includes transition guidelines as part of the module documentation package.
Processing behaviorStatic processing screenBranded processing state with consistent loading behaviorV2 aligns loading behavior with the overall system patterns



Customization Overview

Customization in V2 is significantly simpler and more consistent across modules.

Customizing the experience to match your brand is simpler in V2


Instead of having isolated configuration options per screen or component, V2 uses a unified token-based system that allows developers to control visuals, behaviors, and experience patterns with fewer parameters and predictable outcomes.

This means:

  • Less engineering work to override UI elements
  • Consistent branding across modules
  • Predictable behavior when changing settings
  • Reduced risk of breaking flows
  • Clear separation between visual tokens and experience configuration

V2 also centralizes all customization options under a single structure, so developers always know where to look and what they can modify.