Anything hits $2M ARR in 2 weeks with full-stack vibe-coding

Vibe-coding startup Anything provides end-to-end infrastructure (databases, storage, payments) enabling non-technical users to launch production apps, achieving $2M ARR in two weeks and raising $11M at $100M valuation.

Vibe-coding tools drive massive revenue growth but lack production infrastructure

Vibe-coding—building apps via natural language AI prompts—is surging, with Lovable reaching $100M ARR eight months post-launch (projecting $250M this year, $1B next), and Replit jumping from $2.8M to $150M ARR in under a year. Investors like Footwork's Nikhil Basu Trivedi note every player grows rapidly, but most fail at production: they generate prototypes without databases, storage, or payments needed for live apps. This gap limits non-technical users from shipping revenue-generating products.

Anything succeeds by bundling full backend stack in-house

Launched a month ago by ex-Google founders Dhruv Amin and Marcus Lowe, Anything differentiates with integrated infrastructure—no third-party setups required. Users build complete web/mobile apps deployable to App Store, including habit trackers, CPR courses, and hairstyle try-ons already monetizing. This 'Shopify of vibe-coding' model hit $2M ARR in two weeks, prompting an $11M raise at $100M valuation from Footwork, Uncork, Bessemer, M13. Founders pivoted from a $2M ARR AI dev marketplace after spotting LLMs' speed/cost advantages, investing in proprietary backend vs. rivals' Supabase reliance.

Competition intensifies around infrastructure bets

Rivals like StackBlitz's Bolt, Mocha, and Rork (projecting $10M ARR by year-end) also build in-house stacks, but Basu Trivedi sees ample demand for varied app-builders. Anything's traction proves full-stack solves the prototype-to-business barrier, enabling real revenue on the platform.

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