At this year’s ETHDenver, Sonic Labs pulled the curtain back on something that could quietly reshape how people approach Web3 development. The team introduced Spawn, a new AI-powered platform that lets users create and deploy full decentralized applications simply by describing what they want in plain English. No Solidity. No deployment headaches. No piecing together frontends and wallets. Just a prompt.
For anyone who has ever tried to build a dApp, the pain points are familiar. Even a basic project can spiral into weeks of work across multiple specialties, such as smart contract coding, testing and auditing, compiling, deploying to a chain, wiring up wallets, and building a usable interface. The complexity has kept Web3 creation largely in the hands of experienced developers, even as the rest of software development has moved toward no-code tools and AI-assisted “vibe coding.”
Spawn is Sonic Labs’ attempt to bring that same ease to blockchain. You type something like, “Create a coin flip game where players wager S tokens,” or “Launch an NFT collection with a public mint,” and the system generates the contracts, deploys them to the Sonic testnet, and produces a working web app connected to those contracts. The result isn’t just code, it’s a live, usable dApp.
What makes the experience feel less like programming and more like collaboration is Spawny, the built-in AI agent that guides the process. Instead of editing code, users can refine their project conversationally. Want to tweak the UI? Change game logic? Add a feature? You just ask. Spawn updates the contracts and frontend accordingly, keeping everything in sync. The goal, Sonic Labs says, is to turn dApp creation into something iterative and fast, which is measured in minutes rather than days.
Turning Prompts Into Live Web3 Apps
To show it wasn’t just a concept, the team built a complete Snake game live on stage at ETHDenver from a single prompt. The version they generated included an on-chain leaderboard recorded on Sonic, turning a nostalgic browser game into a decentralized application with verifiable scores. Conference-goers could jump in and play the game right there, trying to climb the leaderboard for a chance to grab some Sonic merch. It gave the demo a fun, hands-on feel and kept a steady crowd gathered around the booth.
Every app created with Spawn is deployed on the Sonic blockchain, Sonic Labs’ own EVM-compatible network built for speed and low costs. The team says Sonic can process up to 400,000 transactions per second with near-instant finality and very small fees. It is the kind of performance needed for responsive apps like games, NFT drops, and payment tools to run smoothly without delays or expensive transactions. By tying Spawn to Sonic from the start, the company is effectively building a pipeline from idea to live dApp entirely within its ecosystem.
That fits into Sonic Labs’ broader push to grow adoption around its S token. Beyond infrastructure, the team has been developing and acquiring pieces of a full on-chain financial stack, trading, lending, payments, and liquidity tools. Spawn adds a new layer: onboarding creators who might never have considered building on blockchain before. If more apps get launched because it’s easier, the thinking goes, network activity and token utility follow.
The preview released at ETHDenver is just the beginning. Sonic Labs plans to roll out a closed beta soon, followed by a wider public launch. Early users can sign up for whitelist access through the Spawn site.
Whether Spawn becomes a breakout tool or just the first step in a larger trend, its debut hints at a shift already underway in Web3. For years, building on blockchain meant learning specialized languages and workflows. Sonic Labs is betting that the next generation of dApps will start not with code, but with a sentence.