This summer, your kid will spend hundreds of hours on a screen.
What if some of them turned your kid from a consumer into a creator? With Poofy, kids build real Minecraft worlds just by describing them.
No clicks, no tutorials, no code. Your kid says what they want — Poofy builds it.
Poofy launches in
--days
--hours
--mins
--secs
Sound familiar?
Camp's over. It's 2pm. And it's "I'm bored" — again. The tablet comes out, another two hours disappear, and there's nothing to show for it.
The shift
Kids are about to start vibe-coding — very young.
The way we make software is changing. You don't click through menus anymore — you tell the computer what you want, and it builds it. Grown-ups call it vibe-coding; developers do it all day with tools like Claude Code. Poofy is that, for a 7-year-old — and the kids who grow up creating this way won't remember a world without it.
"Build a castle with a secret dragon lair."
Your kid says it. It appears — real, in Minecraft, block by block.
How it works
1Say it
Your kid says one sentence.
2Poof
Poofy's AI works out every block.
3Built
It appears in real Minecraft, ready to play.
A whole summer to learn the one skill that matters.
Telling a computer what to build. Start on launch day.
See plans →