MOMO Agent builds full-stack apps

MoMo unveiled 'MOMO Agent', a tool that claims to generate full-stack apps—backend, database and React frontend—from a single prompt in under three minutes, with a Pro tier for deployment and monetization. The announcement positions the product as a rapid prototyping aid for developers and teams. (x.com)

Momo says its new MOMO Agent can turn one text prompt into a working full-stack app, including backend, database, and a React front end, in under three minutes. (x.com) The company said the tool is aimed at developers and teams that want to move from an idea to a prototype without wiring up each layer by hand. The launch post also described a Pro tier that adds deployment and monetization features. (x.com) A full-stack app is a web product with three main parts: the screens users see, the server code that handles logic, and the database that stores information. Momo’s claim is that MOMO Agent can generate all three from a single natural-language prompt instead of requiring separate setup across multiple tools. (x.com) That pitch lands in a software market already crowded with “prompt-to-app” products that promise to generate interfaces, data models, and cloud backends in minutes. Lovable, for example, markets a chat-based workflow tied to Supabase for database, authentication, storage, and serverless functions. (docs.lovable.dev) Momo is not coming from a traditional app-builder background. Its current website says the company’s core product gives coding agents access to customer context, including product analytics, churn signals, feature demand, and team memory pulled from connected tools. (usemomo.com) Its documentation describes that system as a memory layer for agents: Momo extracts decisions and context from tools like Slack, Discord, Notion, Gmail, and GitHub, then keeps that information updated as new events arrive. (docs.usemomo.com, docs.usemomo.com) That matters for how Momo is framing MOMO Agent. Rather than selling only code generation, the company has been positioning itself around giving agents more context about users, teammates, and prior decisions before they write or change software. (usemomo.com, docs.usemomo.com) The open question is how much of MOMO Agent’s new app-building flow is available today beyond the launch post, because Momo’s public site and docs still center on memory, context engineering, and agent plugins rather than a standalone full-stack builder product page. (usemomo.com, usemomo.com, usemomo.com) For now, Momo’s announcement puts it in the same race as other companies trying to compress days of setup into a few minutes of prompting. The next test is whether developers can reproduce the company’s “under three minutes” claim outside the demo post. (x.com, docs.lovable.dev)

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