Replit Everyday was a rapid Replit buildathon prototype exploring a simple question: what if anyone could describe a daily frustration and immediately get a small, buildable app concept back?
The prototype became World Repair Agent — a front-page experience that asks, “What do you wish an app could fix?” and turns everyday problems into concrete app ideas, example tools, and next-step product directions.
The problem
Most people have useful app ideas, but they rarely know how to turn those ideas into something structured enough to build. The first step is usually the hardest: naming the problem, narrowing the use case, and deciding what the first version should actually do.
What I built
I built a polished Replit prototype focused on fast idea-to-app direction:
Front-page prompt flow for describing a problem in plain language
Example idea library with reusable app directions
“Ideas to borrow from” section showing practical starter concepts
Clean UI for turning vague needs into concrete product opportunities
Responsive web experience for desktop and mobile
Rapid fullstack implementation in Replit
My role
I handled the product concept, UX structure, UI design, frontend implementation, and rapid Replit build. The goal was to make the app feel approachable for non-technical users while still being specific enough for builders and agents to act on.
Design direction
The interface uses a calm, optimistic visual style: soft gradients, rounded input patterns, practical suggestion chips, and card-based examples. The goal was to make building apps feel less intimidating and more like describing a problem you already understand.
Outcome
The project demonstrates a fast prompt-to-product workflow: a rough everyday problem can become a clearer app direction in minutes. It works as a proof-of-concept for founders, AI builders, and agent workflows that need to move quickly from idea to prototype.