Sonic launches Spawn at ETHDenver as waitlist opens
The post Sonic launches Spawn at ETHDenver as waitlist opens appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Spawn turns natural language into full Web3 apps on Sonic sonic labs has launched Spawn, an AI-based platform that turns natural-language prompts into complete Web3 applications within minutes, as reported by news/article/sonic-labs-unveils-spawn-for-rapid-web3-app-development-61654?utm_source=openai” target=”_blank” rel=”nofollow noopener”>Phemex News. It assembles smart contracts, front ends, and wallet connections on the Sonic blockchain. The report notes Spawn compresses the build lifecycle from description to on-chain deployment. It is built for Sonic’s EVM-compatible Layer‑1, enabling developers to target familiar tooling and environments. Why it matters: faster, accessible Web3 on EVM-compatible Sonic If effective at scale, Spawn could reduce time-to-market and lower technical barriers in Web3. That may broaden participation while anchoring activity on Sonic’s network where fees and latency are designed to be low. According to PR Newswire, a live preview at ETHDenver 2026 included an auto-generated Snake game with an on-chain leaderboard, and the team is progressing through closed testing with a waitlist. “Web3 has always promised open access, but building on-chain has remained too complex for most people. With Spawn, we’re removing that barrier entirely. If you can describe your idea, you can deploy it,” said Samuel Harcourt, Core Contributor at Sonic Labs. BingX: a trusted exchange delivering real advantages for traders at every level. As reported by Meme Insider, the ETHDenver demo served as a proof-of-concept for prompt-to-deployment workflows, while access remains limited to a closed early access program with a waitlist. In practice, prospective teams should expect staged onboarding and evolving feature breadth during testing. Deployments target Sonic’s EVM-compatible chain, so performance and fees depend on network conditions and contract complexity. Security, limitations, and what to verify before deploying Security of auto-generated smart contracts and review expectations Auto-generated smart contracts can contain vulnerabilities or logic mismatches. Standard practice is to subject code to unit tests, fuzzing, and independent audits before handling…
Filed under: News - @ February 20, 2026 11:23 pm