Agentic Website Builder 2.0 by Lokuma
Design, build, and run your site with a design agent harness
349 followers
Design, build, and run your site with a design agent harness
349 followers
Lokuma 2.0 is a design-aware agent harness for websites. Most AI builders can generate a first draft. But real sites need structure, taste, brand consistency, editing, publishing, forms, and ongoing updates. Lokuma connects planning, design, style, assets, site state, edits, and publishing into one agentic workflow — so your website feels designed, not just generated. Design, build, and run your site with agents.









I've been using agentic website builders like Antigravity, and there are some clear advantages and disadvantages to Agentic Website Builder 2.0 by Lokuma.
On the plus side, it's very easy to use, meaning someone from a non-tech background can easily pick it up. It also handles the design part entirely on its own and honestly does it much better than Antigravity, which requires the user to provide exhaustive details and a hell of a prompt just to make things look aesthetic.
However, it lags behind when it comes to flexibility. Antigravity is basically VS Code on steroids, which devs can leverage much better, but that is not the case here with Agentic Website Builder 2.0.
Design Agent by Lokuma
@ayush_tiwari37 Honest read — you've named the trade-off correctly.
Lokuma sits in the "design comes for free, you cede some dev flexibility" half of the market. Antigravity sits in the other half. Both are legit positions; we picked the first one deliberately.
Two escape hatches today if you need more: export code (Starter+) drops the project into your IDE / GitHub / Cursor; in-chat file editing ("change line 47 of Hero.tsx") works but isn't the primary surface.
If a "Lokuma + dev side-door" would actually solve this for you, tell me what specifically — thinking about how to do it without breaking the non-tech-user path.
Best,
Mu
Design Agent by Lokuma
Hi Product Hunt,
I'm Mu, back again.
In March we launched Lokuma Design Agent here - a design intelligence layer that other AI agents call. It took #1 of the day, and that response shaped what came next.
Design Agent is still one of our core. It's evolving fast — the world is moving toward agent-first stacks, and design intelligence for AI is a long road we're committed to.
But there's another half of the picture.
A lot of people aren't building with their own AI agents, yet.
They're sitting down to make a website themselves.
They still need better tools.
So today I'm launching Lokuma Website Builder 2.0.
Design Agent is for AI.
Website Builder is for the people AI builds for.
Same conviction, different side of the screen.
Why now?
Over the past few months, agent architecture has matured. Tool dispatch, persistent memory, self-repair, observability — the runtime is finally ready. And SMBs and creators are entering AI website building in waves. But most of what they get is still a v1.
Most AI website builders generate a great first draft.
Then they leave.
You change the headline, the design breaks.
You add a section, the brand drifts.
The hero photo is wrong, but you can't say "make it more golden-hour" — because the agent doesn't remember what your brand looks like.
That's not a prompt problem.
That's a runtime problem.
So in the month after Design Agent shipped, we went heads-down to build the runtime underneath.
Lokuma 2.0 is a design-aware agent harness for websites.
The same agent that builds your site can edit it next month, restyle it next quarter, swap a palette, fix a broken form, ship the change. It remembers your brand, your structure, your previous iterations, your live source code.
Generation isn't running a website.
A first draft isn't enough.
You need something that stays.
Why us?
I've spent the last decade building tools designers actually use — Readdy and Creatie reach 500,000+ designers and creators today.
Lokuma Website Builder 1.0 quietly shipped in February and showed us where AI-built websites actually break.
Design Agent gave AI a designer's brain.
This one gives that brain a body — and that took the whole team.
We're a small indie crew — designers who write code, AI researchers who care about typography, growth gurus who were running AI-native marketing experiments before that was a category. The roles blur, deliberately. A harness like this lives in the seams between design and runtime, between agent loops and SMB workflows — exactly where mixed-discipline teams move fastest.
Curious how others here see it:
When your AI ships v1, what's the first thing that breaks the second time you try to change it?
— Mu
Design Agent by Lokuma
I've spent the last few years marketing AI website builders. From inside that seat, the pattern is hard to miss: every new launch promises something different, but the outputs converge within a quarter. Different brands, same skeletons. Different prompts, similar typography. After a while it stops being a tooling problem and starts feeling like a category problem.
The thing that's hard for AI isn't generating a page. It's generating constraint. Design is mostly about what gets left out — the hierarchy that decides what earns attention, the system that decides what's allowed at all. Models are trained on abundance; they want to add. Design wants to subtract. That's the real gap.
Lokuma 2.0 starts there. It builds the design system first — color, type, spacing, hierarchy, the whole grammar — before a single page exists. The site is then composed inside the system, not the other way around. Drop in a reference site and it picks up the design language without copying the layout. Bring an old site across and it gets rebuilt on top of a proper system, content and assets intact.
It's a strange thing to ship from inside a category I've watched commoditize itself. But this is the part that's hardest to fake, and the part that — if it works — holds up. AI is going to keep making generic things faster. Taste is the only layer that compounds.
Design Agent by Lokuma
@qian_712 Your work on this product goes way past marketing. The concepts, the growth thinking, the daily polish on framing — I've learned from all of it. Many great ideas from yo are going to stay with me. Grateful you're on this team.
Best,
Mu
Agentic Website Builder 2.0 by Lokuma
Hey Product Hunt 👋
Joy here, back for round two.
In March, we launched Lokuma Design Agent — a design intelligence layer built for other AI agents to call. It hit #1 Product of the Day, and what we heard from that community changed everything about what we did next.
Design Agent is still core to what we're building. It's moving fast, agent-first stacks are becoming the default, and we're in it for the long game on design intelligence for AI.
But there's a side of this we hadn't fully addressed.
As a branding & marketing agency owner, I've seen how SME owners struggle.
You're wearing ten hats. You're good at your craft — whether that's running a restaurant, a studio, a clinic, a shop. But building a website? That's a different skill set entirely, and hiring someone to do it right isn't always an option.
I watched businesses around me struggle with this for years. Not because they lacked ambition, but because the tools assumed too much, too much time, too much budget, too much technical fluency. They'd settle for something that looked cheap. Or they'd spend money they didn't have on something they couldn't maintain.
That gap is what Lokuma is really about. Not just a better AI tool, but an honest attempt to give small businesses something they've never quite had: a website that looks like it was made for them, and actually stays that way.
What Lokuma 2.0 actually is:
Most AI builders are one-and-done. They generate, then vanish. What you're left with is a site you can't confidently touch — because the thing that built it isn't there anymore.
Lokuma 2.0 is different. It's a design-aware agent harness: the same agent that builds your site sticks around. It comes back next month when you need to update the headline. Next quarter when you want a full restyle. When a form breaks, when the palette needs a refresh, when your offering changes and the whole page needs to catch up.
It knows your brand — not as a setting you configured once, but as something it's held onto: your visual language, your structure, your previous iterations, your live source code. Every edit is informed by everything that came before.
Because here's the thing most builders miss: generating a website isn't the same as running one. A great first draft is just the beginning. The real test is what happens the second time you need to change something — and the third, and the tenth.
You don't just need something that launches. You need something that lasts.
So join us and explore Lokuma 2.0 together.
Design Agent by Lokuma
@lakshminath_dondeti The "AI look" is what happens when you let the model collapse to its mean — the average of everything in its training. Prompts can't pull it off-center reliably; only the system around it can. For us that's vertical data labeling, model engineering, and the harness that integrates both into every iteration. Avoiding mediocrity isn't a prompt problem. It's a system problem.
TarotRead AI
I like lokuma, i tried it and figure it create sites with better design than directly from claude, very nice! good job :)
Design Agent by Lokuma
@nilni Nil, thank you! Means a lot coming from someone shipping Pagegun + Makeform. Both products we look at when thinking about "tools that consistently do their job amazing" — that bar is rare. Keep at it!
Agentic Website Builder 2.0 by Lokuma
Hi PH! Full-stack engineer at Lokuma. I tune guitars on weekends. Tuning agents on weekdays turns out to be the same craft — pluck, listen, find the half-step off, adjust one thing, pluck again. Most of Lokuma 2.0 was built by agents I spent two months tuning. Different strings, same instinct.