SaaS is Dead (Vibe Coding Thesis)

Type: Market thesis / competitive landscape argument

The Claim

Generic SaaS tools — horizontal productivity apps, internal tooling suites, project management platforms — are being disrupted not by better SaaS, but by vibe coding: the ability to build exactly what you need in hours using AI coding agents.

The argument from @baoskee:

"SaaS is kinda dead. We just Codex every internal tool we have. I can build a SaaS in a day and it's completely catered to my use case"

Why This Matters Now (June 2026)

  1. AI coding agents reached escape velocity — Codex, Cursor, Claude Code are production-grade tools, not experiments
  2. Build cost collapsed — What took a team weeks now takes one person hours
  3. Generic SaaS has inherent weaknesses — 80% right, requires adaptation to your workflow, ongoing subscription costs
  4. Custom wins on fit — "completely catered to my use case" vs. "good enough for everyone"

What Survives

The "SaaS is dead" thesis has limits. What vibe coding doesn't replace:

Vulnerable Survives
Internal tools (custom workflow) Platform APIs (Stripe, Twilio) — building blocks, not end products
Solo/small team tools Network effects products (Figma, Slack)
Niche SaaS Regulated/compliance software (audit trails, SOC2)
CRUD apps Infrastructure (hosting, databases, CDNs)

The Hosting Gap

The nuance in the "SaaS is dead" narrative: building is commoditized, but hosting is not. You can vibe code an internal tool in a day, but:
- Deploying it production-grade (SSL, uptime, backups, security) still requires expertise
- The gap between "I built it" and "it's running reliably for my team" is the remaining unsolved problem

This is exactly the problem space dark-factory-kb is researching.

Relationship to Existing KB Content

  • Directly extends vibe-coding concept
  • Complements internal-tool-custom-fit — the fit advantage of custom-built tools
  • Related to Pieter Levels observations: factory-trap, distribution-gap — different layers of the same market shift
  • Pairs with hosting demand research — if build is free, deploy is the scarce skill

Sources

  • @baoskee tweet (June 10, 2026) — 251K views
  • Broader vibe coding movement (Cursor, Claude Code, Codex adoption curves)