
Day 6: 194 downloads, still $0 MRR.
Keeping the grind.
Feel free to share here your progress, to give a bit of motivation to others.

Keeping the grind.
Feel free to share here your progress, to give a bit of motivation to others.
I built an AI product for vibe coders building apps, projects, and SaaS with AI coding agents.
The idea came from my own problem:
AI can help you build the first version fast, but turning that repo into something more production-like is still messy.
You need to understand:
- what stack you are actually using
- what is real vs half-wired
- what still needs to be connected
- what looks risky before users touch it
- what prompt your coding agent should get next
Then launch day came, and I had the exact same problem.
The product worked, but the launch was still messy:
- editor install flow
- browser sign-in
- account page
- free/pro limits
- marketplace README
- extension packaging
- release docs
- stack assumptions
- next agent prompts
So I used my own product on its own repo.
That was the moment it felt real to me.
Not because it was perfect, but because it helped me with the exact messy launch problem I built it for.
The product is called **VibeRaven Station**.
It is a VS Code/Cursor extension that scans your repo, helps you choose/verify your stack, shows what needs to be connected, and helps you understand the next step for your coding agent.
It is live now with 2 free scans.
Site: https://viberaven.vercel.app/
You can also search **VibeRaven Station** in VS Code / compatible extension marketplaces.
I’m mostly looking for real feedback from builders.
Day 1 after launching my product:
0 users.
I knew getting users would be hard, but it feels very different when the product is actually live, and nothing happens.
Building was the easier part.
I could open Cursor, keep coding, fix bugs, add features, improve the landing page, and feel like I was making progress every day.
But now the hard part is different:
- writing posts that do not sound fake
- finding the right communities
- explaining the product clearly
- asking for feedback without sounding desperate
- getting even one real person to try it
The product is VibeRaven Station.
It is an IDE extension for Vibe coders building apps, projects, and SaaS with AI coding agents.
The idea is to help turn a fast AI-built repo into something more production-like: map the stack, see what looks ready or risky, and get a better next prompt for the coding agent.
It is live with 2 free scans, but now I need to learn distribution from zero.
Today’s goal is simple:
Get the first real user to run a scan.
If you have launched from 0 before, what helped you get the first few users?