AI-First Power BI

How to add a Radar Chart to Power BI without writing code

Generate a Power BI Radar Chart without writing TypeScript. Plain-English prompt → .pbiviz file in under 5 minutes. Source code yours forever.

Power BI's marketplace has a few Radar Chart options, but each comes with the same trade-off: you accept the vendor's formatting opinions, pay per-seat licensing, and have no path to customise the visual without buying a higher tier or filing a feature request. The "build it yourself" alternative — write a TypeScript custom visual using D3.js and the Power BI Visuals SDK — is technically no-code at the user level but is 30-50 hours of developer time at the build level.

There's a third path most teams haven't tried yet: AI-generated custom visuals. Describe the Radar Chart you want — the data shape, the styling, the formatting options — and an AI generates a working .pbiviz file you import into Power BI Desktop. The result behaves like a marketplace visual (cross-filtering, tooltips, formatting pane) and costs less than a single seat of a paid marketplace visual on a one-time basis. The TypeScript source ships with the .pbiviz, so if you ever want to extend the visual yourself, you can.

Step-by-step

  1. 1

    Describe what you want in plain English

    Open VizForge. Type a description of the radar chart — for example, the chart family, the data fields, the colour rules, the formatting options users should be able to adjust. The more specific the prompt, the closer the first generation is to what you want.

  2. 2

    Review the AI's classification

    VizForge's classifier reads your prompt and shows back the visual type and complexity it inferred. Confirm it picked the right thing (e.g. radar chart not pie chart). If not, refine the prompt before generating.

  3. 3

    Generate the .pbiviz

    Click Generate. The pipeline runs classify → spec → code → validator → build. Total wall-clock time is typically 1-3 minutes for fresh visuals, 3-5 for refinements. You see a polling progress bar while it runs.

  4. 4

    Refine if needed

    Click Refine on the result and tell the AI what to change — "use our brand colours", "make the bars wider", "add stage-to-stage conversion labels". Each refinement is a minimal diff on the previous version, not a from-scratch regeneration.

  5. 5

    Download and import

    Download the .pbiviz. In Power BI Desktop, click the three-dot menu in the Visualizations pane → Import a visual from a file. The radar chart appears in your gallery and behaves like any built-in chart.

  6. 6

    Bind data and publish

    Drop your fields onto the data wells. Adjust formatting in the standard Power BI formatting pane. Save the .pbix and publish to Power BI Service. The radar chart renders identically in the browser.

The AI alternative: Generate your first radar chart in under five minutes — free trial credits, no card required. Source code yours; refine as many times as you need.

Generate a radar chart on VizForge →

When to use a radar chart

  • Product scorecard vs. competitors across 8+ feature axes
  • Balanced scorecard per quarter (overlay 4 polygons)
  • Candidate skills profile across technical and soft dimensions
  • Employee performance review on a standardized rubric
  • Sports / fitness analytics — player vs. positional average

Frequently asked questions

Is the AI-generated .pbiviz the same quality as a marketplace visual?

Yes — it goes through the same Power BI Visuals SDK build pipeline, the same TypeScript type-checks, the same packaging. Output is a standard .pbiviz file that runs anywhere a marketplace visual runs.

What if the AI gets it wrong on the first try?

Click Refine and describe what to change. Each refinement is a small targeted diff on the working version, not a from-scratch rebuild. Most users converge in 1-3 refinements.

Do I have to pay every time I generate a visual?

Free plan: 5 credits on signup (each visual costs 1-5 credits depending on complexity). After that, credit packs are pay-as-you-go — no subscription, no per-seat licensing. Credits never expire.

How many axes before a radar chart becomes unreadable?

5-10 axes read clearly. Above 12, crowding starts; above 20, use parallel coordinates instead.

Can I overlay multiple entities?

Yes — each distinct Entity value draws its own polygon with a distinct color. Legend toggles visibility.

Fill or outline?

Either. Outline reads cleaner with many overlapping polygons; fill is better for showing one vs. benchmark.

Does the scale start at zero?

By default yes, which is the honest choice. Override to a minimum > 0 only if the data genuinely lives in a narrow band.

Other guides for the radar chart

Same visual, different angle — pick the one that matches what you’re trying to do.

VizForge — AI-generated Power BI custom visuals.

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