You are a developer now — Vibe Coding in 2025
Have you ever dreamed of building your own website or coding your own game, but felt it was out of reach because you’re not a computer scientist or hobby developer? Those days are over.
Large Language Models have created a new culture called “vibe coding.”
With the recent release of Claude Sonnet 3.7, which excels at coding, anyone can now call themselves a developer.
With a single command like “can you generate me a landing page for my business” — without any context or further instruction — Claude Sonnet 3.7 can generate something impressively polished.
Levels.io, an inspirational developer renowned for building multiple fully automated online businesses with 90+% profit margins, is leading the Vibe Coding movement with his flight simulator built using Cursor AI, a popular AI-integrated development environment.
He claims to have built this using Cursor AI and Claude with just one HTML script, which is free to play at https://pieter.com/fly.html.
Traditional software development requires substantial effort. Beyond identifying problems to solve and generating ideas, developers must plan software infrastructure, architecture, user experience, and testing.
However, vibe coding allows you to leverage the world’s latest (and perhaps ultimate) programming language: English. Through simple conversations with an LLM, you can describe what you want to build in plain language. The LLM makes hundreds of decisions autonomously, from choosing technology stacks to determining structure, layout, and frameworks.
While it’s now possible to launch a sophisticated, functional application relatively quickly, we’re still some distance from seamless production deployments.
However, given the current pace of development and existing tools that offer full deployment capabilities (albeit somewhat clunky ones), that future isn’t far away.