Lovable has been covered in 4 videos by 3 AI-focused creators tracked by summree, with a predominantly positive stance. The most recent coverage was 1 month ago.
| Date | Channel | Video |
|---|---|---|
| 4 Jun 2026 | Greg Isenberg | "Codex Sites" Clearly Explained (and how to use it) |
| 4 Jun 2026 | Chris Koerner on The Koerner Office Podcast | The Simplest AI Side Hustle for Beginners |
| 19 May 2026 | Chris Koerner on The Koerner Office Podcast | 12 Simple Online Side Hustles Anyone Can Start |
| 6 May 2026 | Jack Roberts | How to use Codex Better than 99% of People |
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Try it freeTwo creators highlighted Lovable as a tool that removes the coding barrier for people wanting to build and sell software products. Chris Koerner demonstrated building two functional web apps — including payment processing via Paddle — in under fifteen minutes using Lovable, noting that the process involved having ChatGPT generate optimised prompts first. This speed-to-ship capability was central to his argument that non-technical founders can now enter the software market with minimal upfront investment.
In a separate video covering micro-SaaS opportunities, Koerner again listed Lovable alongside Replit, Cursor, and Codex as part of a broader category of 'vibe coding' tools that allow anyone to describe what they want and have AI build it. The consistent message across both videos is that Lovable lowers the floor for building sellable software, making it a practical starting point for side hustles and niche products rather than requiring a technical co-founder.
Whilst Lovable received positive coverage for ease of use, Greg Isenberg's walkthrough of Codex Sites drew a pointed comparison that positions Lovable as a more complete out-of-the-box product. Isenberg noted that Codex Sites currently lacks built-in auth, databases, payments, email, analytics, and a secrets vault — features that, by implication, tools like Lovable already offer. His framing was neutral rather than critical of Lovable; the distinction he drew was about use case fit rather than overall quality.
Jack Roberts' coverage of OpenAI's Codex ecosystem similarly presented a landscape in which multiple tools coexist for different workflows, with autonomous agent capabilities and multi-model strategies becoming the new frontier. Taken together, these two creators suggest that Lovable occupies a strong position for builders who want integrated functionality with minimal setup, but that newer autonomous platforms are beginning to compete on a different axis — self-updating apps and scheduled agents — that Lovable is not yet directly associated with in this coverage.
Across multiple videos, creators framed Lovable and its peers as the infrastructure layer underpinning a practical new business model: building niche software products and selling them to small businesses. Chris Koerner's live demonstration — building apps for garage door repair companies and texting fifty business owners to validate demand within an hour — used Lovable as the core building tool and achieved a confirmed interested prospect within that same session. The proposed model of charging per closed lead, with no upfront cost, was presented as a direct consequence of how cheaply and quickly the underlying apps could be built.
Koerner's earlier video on micro-SaaS reinforced this theme by pointing to Nico, a former restaurant worker with no technical background, who built a lead scraper product now generating £3,500 per month in recurring revenue using similar no-code tools. Both videos treat the current moment as a limited window of opportunity, with Lovable named as one of the key tools making it possible for non-developers to act quickly.
Based on coverage from Chris Koerner, Lovable appears well suited to non-technical builders. He built two functional web apps with payment processing in under fifteen minutes, using prompts generated by ChatGPT rather than any manual coding. Multiple videos list Lovable alongside other no-code tools as part of a category that has genuinely removed the need for prior development knowledge.
Greg Isenberg's walkthrough of Codex Sites notes that it currently lacks built-in auth, databases, payments, email, analytics, and a secrets vault — features that his comparison implied tools like Lovable already include. Codex Sites is positioned as better suited to builders already living in the Codex ecosystem who want autonomous, self-updating apps, whereas Lovable appears to offer more integrated functionality out of the box for those wanting a faster start.
Chris Koerner's videos suggest yes, within specific conditions. He demonstrated building apps for home service businesses and validating demand with real business owners within a single session, and pointed to a case study of someone generating recurring monthly revenue using similar no-code tools. Both videos do caution that the window for these opportunities is time-sensitive, as the effectiveness of any given approach tends to narrow as more people adopt it.
According to Chris Koerner's demonstration, the apps he built with Lovable included payment processing via Paddle with no manual setup required. He described this as part of what made the build-and-sell workflow accessible to non-technical founders, though the summaries do not go into further detail about other payment providers or configuration options.
The coverage in this corpus focuses on Lovable as a tool for building niche, sellable web apps aimed at small business customers — such as quote generators and job profit trackers for home service companies. Creators positioned it as a strong choice when speed of build and integrated functionality matter more than autonomous agent capabilities or deep customisation of the underlying infrastructure.
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