
This AI App Is Using an AI-Generated Ad to Show How Easy It Is to Generate AI App Slop
Back in my day, the phrase used to be 'there's an app for that,' and that's still the case, though with one major amendment: now, it's 'there's an AI app for that.' In fact, there's even an AI app for making apps—buckle up, kiddos, things are about to get meta. Let me explain: Rork, which I stumbled across while scrolling X, is—if we are to drink the Kool-Aid—the app to end all apps. The font from which all other apps may flow. The cold fusion of coding.
Alright, I'm exaggerating, but it's exactly what I alluded to: an app that makes apps, which is like a hat on a hat if the first hat actually made the second hat. To make things even more meta, Rork used an AI ad with Google's new Veo 3 video generator to promote its tool. Is your head spinning yet? Mine kind of is.
When I say Rork makes apps, I mean it really makes the damn thing (at least I think it does since I wouldn't know a functional piece of code if it sat on my chest and suffocated me like a sleep paralysis demon). But on the surface, it does the whole thing. I went to the web version of Rork to try it out (there's no mobile app that I'm aware of), and it seemingly took my text prompt, 'I want to make an app that matches me with similar-sized people in my area to fight. Like Tinder but for fisticuffs,' and ran with it.
Introducing Rork 1.0
Make any mobile app you want, save it to your phone or share it with the world – in minutes.
Powered by Claude 4. Video by Veo 3 AI. pic.twitter.com/xr3uibte7g
— Rork (@rork_app) May 22, 2025
Once I punched the prompt in (pun intended), Rork got to work (thinking for a while as AI does) and then used its corresponding large language model (Anthropic's Claude 4 model) to start drawing everything up. And I mean everything—colors, features, parameters, basically every aspect of an app that you might need to launch. And the conjuring doesn't stop there. Once everything is devised, Rork's interface splits everything off into packages if you want to look at the code (that is, if you're capable of reading it, unlike me), and then it does my favorite part—it generates a usable preview that you can test on your phone or another device.
After the AI had coded everything, I was able to scan a QR code and generate a preview using ExpoGo, a tool that lets you deploy code in a preview mode. So, without further ado, ladies and gentlemen, I present to you: FightMatch, Tinder for kicking ass.
It's worth noting that I tried to make this even more meta by prompting Rork to make an app that uses generative AI to make images or video—an AI app that generates AI—but it ran into some issues that I wasn't able to fully wrap my head around. Per Rork, they were 'critical errors,' and even when I clicked the 'fix' button, it wouldn't budge. No AI app inception today, folks, sorry.
On one hand, as someone with no coding experience, I'm impressed. Rork, as promised, was able to take my very simple text prompt (Tinder for fighting) and write up all the code to make it happen in about a minute or so. Again, a coder I am not, but that feels pretty extraordinary from a sheer idea to preview perspective. I'm fairly certain whatever Rork and Claude generated wouldn't be enough to push to an app store right away, both from a technical and aesthetic perspective, but as a first draft, it's at least serviceable, if very far from perfect. Also, if I'm being honest, I was looking for more of a Fight Club-type app over MMA, but I suppose Claude played this one safe.
There's obviously vast potential here to expedite app creation, but just like with every generative tool like this, there's also potential for something less exciting—slop. Like I wrote earlier this week, tools like Google's Veo 3 and Flow are impressive technical feats, but they also feel primed to further bloat an already overwhelming bucket of AI slop. There's always that question: do we need more apps or do we need better apps? I'm a proponent of the latter philosophy, but if there's one thing I've come to expect in the tech world, it's more. But hey, if I get rich quick with FightMatch, I can't really complain, can I? And if you disagree, swipe right, and let's settle this the old-fashioned way.

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