There are not many AI tools out there that feel aimed at creatives who want to push the boundaries of AI. Weavy is possibly the closest tool I know of that feels in the same ballpark. What brought me to Fuser originally was their social media content, I think it's important to note how they engaged with the creative community. Then what made me stick with Fuser is using the tool. I found that it was a case of jumping straight into it, the user experience is simple, clean, no clutter or scattered options and menus, and allows you to experiment quickly without having to search around for the correct model or node, there is a really intuitive feel to whole tool, if you want to work quickly you can, if you want to iterate easily, you can.
Fuser
Hey Product Hunt, It's Dalena, co-founder and CEO of Fuser. Thanks to @chrismessina for hunting us. 💌
We're back with Fuser Apps! Fuser Apps is our most ambitious and powerful release to date. Your canvas now holds all the context needed to become the source material for your next application. Publishing an app is as easy as hitting "publish" and your app can hold modular databases and become multiplayer instantly.
Since I was a teenager I've been carrying around ideas. Films, platforms, things I wanted to exist that didn't yet. Believing an idea was worth the time, the urgency, the effort to make real was always the hard part. And having the means to do it.
Fuser Apps is our attempt to close that gap. Make whatever is in your head before you forget it. Ideas are perishable. Wait too long and they become another note, screenshot, or bookmark. So move while the idea still knows what it wants to be. Make the small thing. The weird thing. The thing that only matters to five people.
If it found you, maybe it's yours to make.
Happy creating with apps in Fuser!
Free app generations for a month, and all PH users get 20% off first 3 months.
Fuser
Hi PH! Hirad here, co-founder and CTO.
We've all got a graveyard of ideas that never left the deck. An interactive concept that never got past the render. A microsite the studio scoped and quietly shelved. The experiential thing the whole room loved in the pitch, killed by a build timeline nobody could afford.
The ideas were never the problem. The distance between "this should exist" and "this is live and someone can actually touch it" was — everything between the concept and the build, where the good ones quietly die.
Fuser Apps is us closing that distance. You describe the thing you wish existed and it goes live — a real link you can put in front of a client or a room, from your phone, before the idea gets cold.
We've put more real (and more gloriously weird) little things into people's hands in the past week than in the years before it, because the cost of actually making one dropped to basically nothing.
Go make something and put it in front of someone. Then come break it and tell us what's missing — we're here all day.
P.S. @chrismessina hunted us — thank you, truly.
Fuser
There's a particular kind of joy in watching something you helped work on start to take on a life of its own :)
With Fuser Apps, I've already started to see creators, friends, and artists spin up new working apps in real time: multiplayer experiments, collaborative tools, games, generative art, weird little interactive toys, useful things, silly things, things that don't fit any category at all.
And honestly, we're still only scratching the surface. There are features here doing quiet, powerful work that people are just starting to discover, like easily pulling aspects of one app directly into another and seeing it come alive in an entirely new context. That kind of fluidity, where ideas move within and between projects instead of staying locked inside them, feels like the start of something genuinely new.
As a visual thinker, the canvas is such an intuitive way for me to create compared with other approaches to development. It's not a blank command line or chat window, it's a space where ideas, iterations, and media are visible and relational, where creating means shaping connections rather than issuing instructions. That shift changes what's possible.
Deeply proud of this team, and even more excited to see what people make with this.
Thanks @chrismessina for hunting us!
The canvas-as-source-material idea is the interesting leap here. What I'd want to know is what happens to the model nodes once you hit publish. At design time a slow or flaky model call is fine because you're sitting there iterating, but in a live app that same node sits on an end user's hot path. Does a published app cache node outputs or fall back when a model times out or returns junk, or does the user just see the raw failure? That's usually where it-worked-on-my-canvas breaks.
Love that you went with a node-based canvas instead of hiding everything behind a chat box for creative work, seeing and controlling the pipeline matters. Credits never expiring is a nice trust move too, most tools quietly bank on you forgetting them.
Curious how you handle versioning when a team iterates on the same canvas? Congrats on the launch 🚀
modular databases and multiplayer instantly on publish sounds great for a demo, but that's usually where these canvas-to-app tools start showing cracks - once two people are editing the same app's data at once, or a database migration is needed. has anyone actually shipped something with real user data through this, not just a prototype
Femme Stock
Congratulations to Fuser for shipping this new feature. Been using this platform and love the Fuser Apps!
Fuser
@zeng excited to see what you've been building :)