This week's recap covers five ideas that surfaced between Jun 8 and Jun 14, 2026, drawn from community submissions and upvotes on Vibe Code Ideas. Combined they pulled 16 mentions across creator tools, marketing, education, productivity, and automation. The spread is broad, but a clear thread runs through all of them.
1. MBB Page Maker — AI-Powered Presentation Generator
An HTML/CSS/JS slide generator aimed at engineers and consultants who are done fighting PowerPoint. It surfaced with 4 mentions — the highest count this week — which tracks with how much "vibe coding" tooling has normalized browser-native deliverables. Gamma.app has already proven willingness-to-pay for AI slide generation, which validates the market but also sets a high bar: "consultant aesthetic" is not a moat unless the output genuinely holds up in front of real clients, not just in demo screenshots.
2. Firehooks — Viral TikTok Ad Swipe File for SaaS
A curated, AI-searchable database of organic TikTok hooks and scripts for SaaS products, so founders stop reinventing the content wheel every campaign. It pulled a strong market signal despite only 3 mentions, probably because TikTok has quietly become a real B2B discovery channel and most founders have no playbook for it. The comparable tools — Foreplay, MagicBrief — target paid e-commerce creative, not organic SaaS hooks, which leaves a gap. The ceiling risk is real though: swipe files commoditize fast once users extract what they need and churn.
3. Tiny LLM Training Platform
A browser-accessible platform where non-ML engineers train small transformer models (9–50M parameters) in minutes using free compute, designed to build genuine intuition rather than just theoretical knowledge. Three mentions, but the signal is clear given how many bootcamps and self-taught developers are looking for hands-on AI education that goes deeper than prompt engineering. Hugging Face's AutoTrain exists but is built for practitioners who already have context — this aims at true beginners. The central tension is unit economics: subsidizing GPU time for hobbyists who churn quickly is a brutal structural problem, and if free compute gets rate-limited, the value proposition collapses before willingness-to-pay catches up.
4. Multi-Drive Storage Gateway
A unified dashboard that connects multiple Google Drive accounts and automatically routes uploads to whichever account has available quota — essentially turning throwaway Gmail accounts into structured storage. Three mentions, strong market signal, and notably low competition: MultCloud handles multi-cloud transfers but ignores the quota-routing and unified-organization angle entirely. The $500–2k/mo revenue band is believable for a low-friction subscription, though the ceiling is real — most users solve this pain once and stop paying recurring fees. The existential risk is Google raising free storage limits or adding multi-account management to Workspace, which would erase the core use case overnight.
5. AI Approval Workflow Manager
A governed checkpoint layer that sits inside AI agent pipelines and requires explicit human sign-off before an agent executes consequential actions — built for the compliance-conscious teams that regulatory pressure is now forcing to document autonomous decisions before they happen. Three mentions, strong signal, and the highest revenue ceiling of the five at $2k–10k/mo, which reflects real enterprise willingness-to-pay for audit trails. LangChain and similar orchestration tools offer primitive callback hooks but nothing close to a proper approval and audit layer. The risk is timing: Microsoft Copilot Studio and Salesforce Agentforce could bake approval gates directly into their platforms within 12–18 months, making a standalone tool redundant before it reaches meaningful scale.
All five ideas orbit the same underlying bet: that AI adoption is moving faster than the tooling around it, and the gaps are being filled by solo builders before incumbents notice. That pattern has been consistent for three weeks running now.