What happens to the App Store when vibe coding makes building apps 100× faster and cheaper? A few things I think start to happen: 1. Apps increasingly launch for very specific moments instead of trying to keep users forever. You download it, get value, and move on. 2. Apps that solve a problem in under 30 seconds convert 2–3× better than apps that require onboarding. 3. A new pricing norm emerges: ~$1–$10 for one moment of value, paid instantly, with no expectation of future use. Disposable apps. 4. More examples of revenue concentrating at the account level, not the app level. You'll see seven/eight/even 9 igures across dozens of micro-apps. 5. Some of the most valuable apps never appear in App Store rankings because they spread peer-to-peer and are super niche. 6. Founders start shipping 10-20 micro-apps per year, expecting 1–2 to stick, instead of betting everything on one product. 7. The average successful app team trends toward 1–2 people, even at $1–5M ARR, because product surfaces stay small. 8. Distribution shifts toward people with trust. Creators, communities, and group chats quietly become the real app curators. 9. More extremely niche apps that didn't make sense to build are now being launched 10. Apps get named like content, not companies. Short, emotional, contextual names win. 11. App naming converges toward 5–8 character names because they perform better in links, sharing, and memory. 12. Apps win on tone and identity more than features. Two apps can do the same thing, but one feels like it’s “for you.” 13. The fastest growing category becomes “utility + identity” apps, tools that also signal taste or values. ...