Anything raises $11M at $100M valuation to turn vibe-coded prototypes into full apps

The boom in AI-powered “vibe coding” has created breakout startups like Lovable and Replit. Now, a new entrant, Anything, wants to go further — helping non-technical users turn prototypes into production-ready businesses.
The Rise of Vibe Coding
“Vibe coding” — building apps and websites through natural language prompts instead of traditional code — has exploded in popularity over the past year.
- Swedish startup Lovable hit $100 million ARR just eight months after launch and expects to reach $1 billion within a year.
- Replit reported ARR growth from $2.8 million to $150 million in less than 12 months.
These companies’ growth has fueled a surge of competitors. But many, according to investors, have the same weakness: they excel at prototyping but leave users stranded when it comes to launching fully functional products.
Anything’s Pitch: From Idea to App Store
Founded by former Google colleagues Dhruv Amin and Marcus Lowe, Anything aims to fix that gap. The startup offers not only AI-powered app generation but also the backend infrastructure—databases, storage, payments—needed to get an app into production.
In just two weeks after launch, Anything hit a $2 million annualized run rate. On Monday, the company announced it has raised an $11 million round at a $100 million valuation, led by Footwork with participation from Uncork, Bessemer, and M13.
“We want to be the Shopify of the space, where people build apps that make money on top of us,” said Amin.
Already, users have created apps like a habit tracker, a CPR training course, and a hairstyle try-on tool, some of which are generating revenue.
Building Infrastructure In-House
Unlike rivals such as Lovable or StackBlitz’s Bolt, which rely heavily on third-party services like Supabase, Anything has built much of its infrastructure in-house. Amin and Lowe believe this differentiator will make their apps easier for non-technical creators to launch and maintain.
This strategy echoes other competitors like Mocha and Rork (which projects $10 million ARR by year’s end), suggesting that full-stack vibe coding could be the next major growth driver in the space.
Backed by Explosive Market Demand
Despite heavy competition, investor Nikhil Trivedi of Footwork believes the market is big enough for multiple winners. “This is one of those spaces where every company is growing like a weed,” he said.
For Anything, the bet is clear: vibe coding isn’t just for hobbyists building prototypes—it’s for entrepreneurs who want to build real businesses without writing code.