Vibe‑code tools proliferate
‘Vibe coding’ — building apps from natural‑language ‘vibes’ — is surging: communities are testing ~13 tools (Cursor, Claude Code, Devin, v0 among them) and sharing fast prototypes ( ). Creators like @HeyYoGB run a 'vibecoded' weekend app generator with 30 prompts and low‑cost bundles (ChatLLM at $7) are packaging ready‑made vibe apps for rapid submission ( ).
GitHub’s “vibe-coding” topic now surfaces roughly 2,725 public repositories that tag themselves under the workflow, signaling rapid community-driven project sharing. (github.com ) Cursor announced a programming‑optimized Composer 2 model on March 19, 2026, and the company claimed Composer 2 outperforms Claude Opus 4.6 on many coding tasks. (siliconangle.com ) Anthropic’s Claude Code product documentation lists multi‑file editing, CLI support, IDE integrations for VS Code and JetBrains, and the ability to run shell commands as part of its agent workflows. (claude.com ) Devin (by Cognition) markets itself as an autonomous AI software engineer with parallel cloud agents and publishes an enterprise case study showing use at Nubank for large refactors. (devin.ai ) Multiple outlets report Apple has started rejecting or blocking updates to apps that enable external code execution or runtime changes — a move that app publishers say is affecting vibe‑coding builders. (geeky-gadgets.com androidheadlines.com ) Creator marketplaces and prompt banks are emerging: vibecoded.io runs a community app directory, VibeCodex advertises 500+ battle‑tested vibe prompts, and platforms such as Abacus.AI’s ChatLLM offer a promotional $7 first‑month plan that many builders use to orchestrate multi‑LLM vibe workflows. (vibecoded.io vibecodex.dev chatllm.abacus.ai )