I am not going to comment on your work. You have to re-do your portfolio right now. What I see is one very long graphic, I have to use the +/- to zoom in and then manually scroll by clicking and dragging. No one wants to do this. Post a link once you fix it.
No. This is what I saw. I had to use the +/- in the lower right corner to enlarge then click and drag to navigate. I am not trying to be overly harsh, but this is an unacceptable portfolio — especially for someone selling his UI/UX skills.
In my opinion, someone selling themselves as a UI/UX expert should have a standalone site. If you want to have a behance site in addition, that’s fine, but you need your own site.
You’re promoting yourself as a UI/UX expert, yet you’ve broken the most fundamental rules of UX design: quick load time and intuitive navigation.
To see your work, you’re expecting people to download your entire portfolio before they can view any of your work. Then you’re expecting people to realize they need to click the small enlarge button instead of assuming everything is broken. Once the enlarge button is clicked, it enlarges to the width of my 30" display.
After getting this far (assuming I haven’t given up), I want to see your work with a brief explanation of each piece. Instead, I’m faced with lengthy explanations, with your actual work playing only a secondary role. I don’t need to see huge color swatches indicating which hex colors you’ve used. I don’t need to see examples of the typefaces you’ve used. What I want to see is your work.
Your portfolio is one giant scrollable Figma page with no scrollbar. Why? Do you think everyone will be viewing your portfolio on a mobile phone? If this portfolio is intended for potential employers, they won’t be making important evaluations about your abilities and who to hire on their phones; they’ll be viewing it on a larger display.
And what is this? Por t folio?
I’m sorry for such a harsh critique, but I agree with @Steve_O, the structure of the portfolio itself (not the work in the portfolio) and the thoughts and assumptions behind it warrant a complete rethink and redo.