
Anything
AI agent that turns natural language descriptions into mobile apps, websites, tools, and products with code, featuring GPT-5 and 40+ integrations.
Key Features
- ✓Natural language to app/site generation
- ✓Mobile app building
- ✓GPT-5 integration
- ✓40+ third-party integrations
- ✓Code-based output for sites, tools, and products
What Is Anything?
Anything, built by the team behind the former Create.xyz, is an AI agent designed to turn natural language descriptions into full-stack web and native mobile apps.
It outputs native iOS and Android binaries alongside responsive web apps, with a bundled backend that covers auth (email and social), payments, file storage, and analytics. The pitch is simple: describe what you want in a chat box, and Anything handles the code, the database, the backend wiring, and the deployment.
Originally launched as Create.xyz, the company rebranded to "Anything" in late 2025 to reflect its evolution from a simple code generator into an autonomous development ecosystem. The momentum has been real: Anything hit a $100M valuation after reaching $2M ARR in its first two weeks.
How It Actually Works
Anything AI is an "AI App Agent" -- a full-stack development environment where the primary interface is a chat box. Unlike traditional website builders that produce static pages, Anything AI generates human-readable code (React, Tailwind, Node.js) and manages the complex "plumbing" of an app including databases, authentication, and servers.
The standout differentiator is what they call the Max agent. It runs the app like a user, clicking through flows and checking for errors, opens an internal ticket if something breaks, applies a fix, and reruns the scenario, repeating until it reaches the goal or exhausts the allotted credits.
Anything AI is one of the only AI builders that actually sees and uses the app it builds -- it clicks buttons, fills forms, logs in, gets stuck, fixes itself, and keeps building.
Anything uses a mix of models from Anthropic (Claude), OpenAI (GPT), Google (Gemini), and open source. The agent picks the right model for each step to balance cost, speed, and accuracy depending on the task and project complexity. You can override the default with a model switcher.
Who It Is For
This tool targets founders and small teams who want to ship an MVP without assembling a backend stack themselves. If you are a solo founder or small team who wants native mobile parity without touching DevOps, Anything.com is worth testing.
Developers who have worked with Lovable or Bolt will find Anything familiar in concept but more opinionated about its backend. The integrations span communications (Resend), automation (Zapier), mapping (Google Maps), and AI models, which makes it appealing for teams that want mobile parity without juggling keys or cloud setup.
Pricing
Anything offers a free tier with generous access to basic app building and a daily limit on AI credits, with Pro and premium tiers running approximately $20 to $50 per month, and an Anything Max tier at around $200 per month for users who want a "24/7 AI Engineer" that can autonomously debug and iterate.
| Plan | Credits / Mo | Approx. Price |
|---|---|---|
| Free | 3k (one-time) | $0 |
| Pro 20k | 20k | ~$16/mo |
| Pro 50k | 50k | ~$40/mo |
| Pro 100k | 100k | ~$80/mo |
| Max (Autonomous) | 200k | ~$200/mo |
The agent uses a variable number of credits per prompt based on task complexity. It's often cheaper to upgrade your subscription if you're purchasing top-off credits often.
Where It Falls Short
The credit model is the most consistent complaint. Some users report burning through a $25 credit allocation in under an hour, describing the experience as feeling like a scam.
Self-healing autonomous debugging, especially on the Max plan, can consume credits quickly if the AI gets stuck in a loop.
Users on Product Hunt report burning through tens of thousands of credits with no completed output, noting that backend dashboards and infrastructure are a different challenge from building pages. On Trustpilot, some users report that the tool keeps breaking things and then asks you to purchase more credits, making it difficult to build viable apps without backend and DevOps help.
Highly custom features may still need manual coding, and quirks in the AI output can require hands-on correction.
The Honest Take
Anything is genuinely interesting if your use case is scoped and concrete. The Max agent's ability to run your app, detect broken flows, and self-repair is a real step beyond what most vibe-coding tools offer. The built-in Neon Postgres backend, auth, and payment wiring remove a lot of setup friction for mobile or web MVPs. But go in clear-eyed: the credit system rewards careful, well-specified prompts, and open-ended complex builds can drain your budget before you have a working product. Test it with a tightly defined MVP first before committing to higher tiers.



