Lovable raises $330M at $6.6B, The Huge Opportunity of The Missing Half of AI Video
Teaching Video to “Grow Its Own Sound”
Lovable Raises $330M at $6.6B, Ushering in the “Age of the Builder”
Swedish AI startup Lovable just closed a $330 million Series B at a $6.6 billion valuation, led by CapitalG and Menlo Ventures’ Anthology Fund, with top-tier investors including NVIDIA’s NVentures, Salesforce Ventures, Databricks Ventures, and Accel joining in.
The funding will supercharge Lovable’s mission: making AI-driven software building accessible globally and at enterprise scale.
Founded in 2023 by Anton Osika and Fabian Hedin, Lovable is known for its AI “vibe coding” platform, which turns natural language descriptions into fully functional websites and full-stack applications.
Users can design front-end interfaces, back-end logic, databases, and even authentication, all without writing a line of code—rapidly moving from idea to production.
The numbers are eye-popping:
100,000+ new projects built on Lovable every day
25 million+ total projects created in our first year
Half a billion visits to Lovable-built websites and apps in the last six months
6 million+ daily visits to Lovable-built sites and apps (200 million+ monthly)
Enterprise clients like Klarna and Deutsche Telekom use Lovable for prototyping and accelerating product development.
Lovable has already surpassed $200M ARR and is projected to reach $1B ARR within the next 12 months. Investors say Lovable is leading a new era: the “Age of the Builder.”
With Lovable, anyone—from designers to product managers to entrepreneurs—can now build software, redefining the rules of creation and hinting at how AI will reshape the future of software development.
The Missing Half of AI Video: Why I’m Bullish on This AI
There’s finally a new AI startup that genuinely made me pause.
Not because it’s flashy, or because it claims to be “general,” but because it quietly fixes something fundamental that almost everyone else missed.
The company raised over $40 million in a seed round, in a category that most people would casually label as “voice AI,” lumping it together with companies like ElevenLabs.
That framing is understandable—but it’s also misleading.
What this team is actually building sits at the intersection of AI video and audio, and it targets a market that is both massive and almost entirely overlooked.
I like to call it AI audio for videos.
It’s a category that will grow exponentially as AI video becomes mainstream. And once you see the problem clearly, it’s hard to unsee it.



