Yield Guild Games Launches vibecode.gg, a Hub for Vibe-Coded Games
YGG announced vibecode.gg on June 16, a central hub for discovering, reviewing, and building AI-powered vibe-coded games, extending a push it ran through a 120-team hackathon in Seoul. The guild has not yet detailed how the hub reviews or lists games.

Yield Guild Games has launched vibecode.gg, a central hub for discovering, reviewing, and building AI-powered "vibe-coded" games, the guild announced on June 16 from its @YieldGuild account.
Yield Guild Games ties into the Abstract ecosystem through YGG Play, its publishing arm behind Abstract titles like LOL Land and Waifu Sweeper.
"Vibe coding" describes building a game by giving an AI natural-language prompts instead of writing code, an approach that lets people with no programming background ship playable titles. EGamers described it that way in covering a recent YGG event, where participants ranged from students with no coding background to working software engineers.
The launch extends a push YGG has been running for months. At BuidlHack 2026, held during Korea Buidl Week in Seoul from April 14 to 18, 120 teams built playable games on Verse8's AI platform in a YGG Play x Verse8 "Casual Degen" track, according to Geek Metaverse and EGamers.
Verse8's platform lets builders generate game logic, assets, and environments from natural-language prompts, letting teams "build, test, and iterate on multiple concepts within a single day," Geek Metaverse reported.
Gabby Dizon, a YGG co-founder, framed the appeal in cultural terms. "Vibe coding opens game creation to different kinds of creators," he said, per EGamers. "Now the best games can come from gamers, streamers, students, people who think in terms of culture and experience... Vibe coding lets them be the builders."
The Seoul hackathon carried a $5,000 prize pool, with the 3D multiplayer board game Bank or Plank taking first place, Geek Metaverse reported. Standout projects were "considered for publishing via YGG Play," the outlet said.
vibecode.gg arrives as a standing home for that kind of output, roughly two months after the Seoul event. YGG describes the site as a place to discover, review, and build vibe-coded games, per its June 16 post, though the guild has not detailed how the hub curates or reviews submissions, or which titles are listed at launch.
Our read tracks Yield Guild Games as Steady, on a routine posting cadence over the past month.
YGG has not said whether vibecode.gg carries the BuidlHack games or how its review process works, and those details were not independently verifiable from the announcement alone. Until the guild publishes them, the hub's curation model and launch lineup remain open questions.