On March 26, 2026, the “no-code” revolution hit a digital brick wall. Apple officially pulled Anything, a breakout “vibe coding” application, from the iOS App Store. The move marks a significant escalation in Apple’s ongoing campaign against a new breed of AI tools that allow users to generate and execute software directly on their mobile devices.
For several days, visitors to the Anything App Store page have been met with a blank screen, a literal “nothing” where a platform promising to be “the fastest way to build apps” once stood. This removal follows weeks of friction between Apple and the developers of other prominent AI coding platforms, including Replit and Vibecode, signaling that the era of the “pocket software engineer” may be facing an existential threat from the very ecosystem that birthed it.
The Rule That Killed the Vibe: Guideline 2.5.2
The official cause of death for Anything on iOS is a violation of App Store Review Guideline 2.5.2. This long-standing rule originally designed to prevent malicious apps from downloading “hidden” features after passing Apple’s initial inspection states that apps must be “self-contained in their bundles.”
Specifically, Apple prohibits apps from downloading, installing, or executing code that introduces new features or changes the core functionality of the app. In the eyes of Apple’s review team, an app that allows a user to type a prompt like “Make me a tool to track my spending” and then immediately runs that newly generated code is a “chameleon app.” Because the code is created by an AI model in real-time, it was never vetted by Apple, creating what the tech giant considers an unacceptable security risk and an “unbounded attack surface.”
What Exactly is “Vibe Coding”?
The term “vibe coding” emerged as a meme in late 2024 before becoming a legitimate industry methodology by 2026. It describes a process where a user with zero traditional programming knowledge “vibes” with an AI describing goals in natural language while the AI handles the architecture, logic, and syntax.
Anything was the poster child for this movement. Led by CEO and co-founder Dhruv Amin, the startup had raised $11 million at a $100 million valuation just six months ago. The app allowed users to create fully functional websites, internal business tools, and even basic games using nothing but text prompts on an iPhone. According to Amin, Anything has been used to ship thousands of apps to the App Store, ranging from emergency worker management tools to gig-economy trackers. By removing the tool, Apple isn’t just killing an app; it’s effectively disabling a mobile development studio.
The Failed Compromise: No Browser, No Entry
The removal of Anything wasn’t a sudden ambush; it was the culmination of a months-long stalemate. Apple had been blocking updates to the app since December 2025, demanding that the developers remove the ability to “preview” and run the generated code within the app.
In a last-ditch effort to comply, Amin’s team submitted an update that would move the app-building previews out of the native iOS environment and into a standard web browser. The logic was simple: if the code runs in Safari, it’s outside the “bundle” and theoretically exempt from Guideline 2.5.2. Apple rejected the update anyway and, shortly after, removed the app entirely. This suggests that Apple’s concerns may go beyond simple technical guidelines and into the realm of ecosystem control.
Anything is not the only casualty of 2026. Earlier this month, Apple reportedly blocked updates for Replit, one of the world’s most popular cloud-based coding platforms. While Replit remains on the store for now, it exists in a state of “feature freeze.”
This broader crackdown highlights a growing tension. As AI models from OpenAI and Anthropic become capable of writing production-ready code in seconds, the iPhone is evolving from a consumption device into a creation device. Apple, however, seems determined to ensure that all software running on its hardware passes through its own toll booths and inspection stations.
Industry analysts have pointed out a sharp irony in Apple’s enforcement: Xcode, Apple’s own professional development suite, recently introduced its own “autonomous coding” features powered by AI.
While Apple argues that its restrictions are about “user safety” and “sandboxing,” critics suggest the motivation is competitive. By preventing third-party apps from becoming “mini App Stores” where users can create and share their own tools, Apple preserves its status as the sole gatekeeper of what software is allowed to exist on the iPhone. If a user can “vibe code” a custom calculator in thirty seconds for free, they are less likely to download a paid ad-supported one from the App Store.
The removal of Anything is a warning shot to the entire AI industry. As we move further into 2026, the battle for the “open mobile web” is intensifying. Developers are already pivoting, with many vibe coding tools moving exclusively to Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) to bypass Apple’s restrictions entirely.
For now, the “Anything” page is gone, and the dream of building the next great app while sitting on a bus has been deferred. As the AI “vibe” meets the reality of corporate policy, the question remains: will the iPhone remain a platform for innovation, or will it become a locked garden where only Apple-approved intelligence is allowed to grow?



