Endstorm – a Solo-Dev Automation Engine That Mass-Produces Digital Products
Key topics
I’m a solo developer who accidentally built something big.
Endstorm is a fully-automated digital-product factory: it can design, generate, package, and prepare customer-ready digital products with almost zero human input.
It’s powered by: • A multi-stage orchestrator • Self-checking pipelines • Logging + fail recovery • Visual automation (Pexels → ImageMagick → PDFs) • Auto-packaging (ZIP bundles) • Auto-publishing • A memory-aware workflow • Fully modular rituals (Design → Build → Visual → Publish)
Right now, it can produce 85+ unique customer-ready products in a single run. Everything includes content, assets, formatted files, and the final sellable package.
Why I’m posting:
I want feedback from people who build tools like Devin, Cursor, and other AI dev workflows. I want to know what’s missing, what’s valuable, and how far this type of engine can realistically go.
What I haven’t done yet: • No team • No funding • No front-end • The system lives only on my home PC in Florida • I’m traveling with only a tablet • Not public yet — beta access is limited
What I’m trying to validate:
Is there a real market for a product-generation engine that can mass-produce digital kits, templates, and content bundles automatically?
Would love feedback, criticism, technical questions, or ideas.
Thanks!
Gumroad Early Access (very limited): https://rogersiill.gumroad.com/l/epmgns
A solo developer shares Endstorm, an automation engine that mass-produces digital products with minimal human input, and seeks feedback from the community.
Snapshot generated from the HN discussion
Discussion Activity
No activity data yet
We're still syncing comments from Hacker News.
Generating AI Summary...
Analyzing up to 500 comments to identify key contributors and discussion patterns
Want the full context?
Jump to the original sources
Read the primary article or dive into the live Hacker News thread when you're ready.
Discussion hasn't started yet.