Whip launches as a social feed of tappable AI mini apps and games

Creator samagra14 debuts Whip as a social home for playful, weird, useful AI mini apps and games, with no-code creation and a public download link.

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Why it matters

If Whip can make building and remixing AI mini apps as easy as posting to a feed, it could unlock a new consumer surface for LLM-native utilities and accelerate bottoms-up app discovery.

Thumbnail from launch video

Whip is live. In a thread on X, samagra14 (@samagra_sharma) introduced Whip (@joinwhip) as "a social feed of interactive AI apps and games where each post is something you can tap and play." He framed the launch around a gap in distribution: "AI has made it easier than ever to build software, but there isn’t a good social home for the playful, weird, useful things people make."

poster=/api/storage/public-objects/tweet-videos/whip-launches-social-feed-playable-ai-mini-apps-poster-1c1e42ca.jpg|Launch video - @samagra_sharma

The app invites users to make and share lightweight AI-powered mini apps, then browse a feed where each post is directly interactive. The thread pointed to a public download link to "make your first app" (download Whip). In replies, the founder emphasized speed and accessibility for builders, pitching Whip as no-code and no-infra so people can publish without a traditional stack.

Beyond creation, he highlighted a remix-first culture, noting user-made variants of a game and writing that "App is the new note" on the feed. The bet is that AI-native toys and utilities will spread faster when they are shareable and instantly playable inside a social stream rather than hidden behind static links or screenshots.

The road to release was bumpy. "All the cyber attacks, supply chain attacks, constant apple rejections - This roller coaster was a very steep one lol," he wrote in a reply, offering a glimpse at the gauntlet behind getting Whip into the wild.

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