Wron is an early-stage AI platform for creating mobile apps from a written brief. A user describes an idea in chat, adds reference images, and receives an app that can be revised, downloaded, and tested on a phone. The builder sits alongside Niche Finder for exploring app opportunities and Ad Library for studying mobile ads.
The service targets indie developers, solo founders, and entrepreneurs with limited coding experience. Wron tries to connect market research, product creation, and advertising research in one workflow. That combination distinguishes it from many AI app builders, although each module should still be evaluated separately.
App Builder: prompts, code, and backend
App Builder accepts a written brief and visual references, generates an interface and code, and supports further edits inside the project. The official site lists backend functions, private workspaces, and, on its highest plan, Supabase and RevenueCat integrations. Wron also says users can download and test the resulting native app and prepare it for store publication.
Niche Finder before the first line of code
Niche Finder provides download and revenue estimates intended to help users select a market before they start building. These figures are not audited financial data. Wron's FAQ says the estimates come from market data and proprietary analysis and acknowledges that no estimate is perfectly accurate. Ad Library presents app advertisements from platforms such as TikTok and Instagram so users can examine common formats. An ad's presence in the library does not mean that copying it will reproduce its performance or respect third-party intellectual property.
Credits and the real cost of the annual discount
At the time of review, Wron displayed three paid plans. Starter was $19.99 per month when paid monthly, or the equivalent of $4.99 per month when billed annually, with 100 monthly credits. Builder was $29.99 monthly or $6.99 per month on annual billing, with 200 monthly credits and 200 bonus credits in the first month. Studio was $79.99 monthly or $19.99 per month on annual billing, with 1,000 monthly credits and a one-time first-month bonus of another 1,000 credits.
Credits are consumed when an app is built, and Wron says the cost of a build depends on its complexity. According to the FAQ, browsing Niche Finder and Ad Library is free and does not use credits. Plan credits refresh every month, while unused credits are said not to expire. Wron changed its pricing shortly after launch, so prospective customers should reopen the live pricing page and confirm the total annual charge before subscribing.
Who is accountable for this young service
Wron is a very new service. Its domain was registered on April 15, 2026, and its Terms and Privacy Policy were updated on June 17, 2026. The website does not identify a legal company, founders, or a public team. The operator is named only as Wron, and the terms select the law of the US state of Georgia. This does not establish wrongdoing, but it leaves little public evidence for assessing the operator's history, support capacity, or long-term reliability.
Checks to run before an app-store release
The terms state that generated code, designs, and other output may contain errors, may not be unique, and may fail legal or app-store requirements. Wron does not guarantee that an app will function correctly, receive store approval, earn revenue, or attract users. Its marketing copy mentions both the App Store and Google Play, while plan feature lists more consistently refer to the App Store. Support for both storefronts should therefore be confirmed through a demo or directly with support.
Prompts, uploaded files, project details, and generated material may be processed by third-party AI providers. Sensitive business or personal data should not be submitted without understanding those providers and the applicable privacy terms. Before release, every generated app still needs code review, security testing, a compliant privacy policy, content-license checks, and store-policy review. Wron may shorten the path to a prototype, but it does not replace technical or legal due diligence.

