In Brief:
- At BuidlHack 2026 during Korea Buidl Week in April, 120 teams built fully functional games for the YGG Play x Verse8 Casual Degen track using vibe coding on the Verse8 platform.
- Five creators shared their experience, ranging from a student with no formal programming background to a software engineer. All shipped playable games within the hackathon window.
- YGG co-founder Gabby Dizon said vibe coding opens game creation to gamers, streamers and students who think in terms of culture and experience rather than syntax.
A student, a software engineer, a crypto gamer with no coding experience and two hobbyist builders all shipped playable games at BuidlHack 2026 using vibe coding on Verse8. They were five of 120 teams that entered the YGG Play x Verse8 Casual Degen track during Korea Buidl Week in April.
YGG Play profiled the five creators in a post published May 21, drawing out what each learned about building games by describing what they wanted rather than writing traditional code.
The creators
Authoritylase, a student with no formal programming background, built Degen Dash, an endless runner themed around the pace of crypto trading. She entered expecting the process would demand skills she didn’t have. Vibe coding let her focus on pacing and replayability instead.
Jeshiling, a software engineer with a physics and statistics background, had been thinking about making his own game for too long. His project, Spin the Narrative, generates narrative events that shape each session differently. “Traditional programming meant translating his vision through layers of syntax,” YGG Play wrote. “Vibe coding let him describe what he wanted directly.”
Shepherd had deep crypto culture knowledge and a player’s instinct for what feels good but didn’t know how to code. His 3D endless runner, Abstract Dashers, went from concept to playable in days.
Inzane_jane had already been experimenting with vibe coding across multiple tools. Moving to a single platform on Verse8 eliminated the friction of asset management, URL hosting and context switching. Her arcade game, Degen Bubble Shooter, adds hidden bombs and a bonus system to the classic bubble shooter format.
0x_zeke built Alpha Leak, a fast-paced decision game where players read crypto-style signals and choose whether to ape or ignore. The rapid feedback loop of vibe coding let him validate design choices based on how the game actually played rather than theoretical plans.
What it signals
The hackathon ran on Verse8, Planetarium Labs’ AI-native game creation platform, which recently shipped Ragnarok Breaker from a single prompt in three days. The 120-team turnout suggests vibe coding is pulling in builders who wouldn’t enter a traditional game jam.
“Vibe coding opens game creation to different kinds of creators,” Gabby Dizon, co-founder of YGG, said. “Now the best games can come from gamers, streamers, students, people who think in terms of culture and experience, who like to try new things and discover opportunities through them. Vibe coding lets them be the builders.”
Standout projects from the hackathon are under review for publication by YGG Play.