Yeetship — The Website That Builds Itself
yeetship.com
Yeetship: vote on features, watch them get built autonomously. Pay to join, submit ideas, and shape the product.
About
Yeetship — The Website That Builds Itself
Visitors to Yeetship.com step into a product development loop where the community is the only decision-maker. The site operates on a simple but radical premise: users vote on what gets built next, and an autonomous system handles the rest — design, code, testing, and deployment — without a product manager, roadmap, or human engineering team intervening in between.
The process begins when members submit ideas. There are no filters for practicality or convention; the platform explicitly welcomes unconventional suggestions alongside practical ones. Once an idea is in the system, other members vote on it. When a proposal gathers enough support, the platform takes notice and moves it forward automatically. The result appears as a live feature on the site, shipped without any human involvement in the build process.
This positions Yeetship as something genuinely unusual in the software world. Traditional product development relies on gatekeepers — managers who weigh priorities, engineers who schedule work, stakeholders who approve scope. Yeetship removes that layer entirely. The community expresses its preferences through votes, and the machine executes. Members who wake up after voting on a feature may find it already live on the site by the time they return.
The platform is built for people who have ever felt ignored by the products they use. Anyone with an idea — practical, experimental, or outright strange — can drop it into the system and see whether others share the enthusiasm. The voting mechanism functions like a petition where the outcome actually matters: sufficient support triggers action rather than filing the request away indefinitely.
Membership is paid, and the pricing structure has an unusual mechanic built into it. The cost rises with every new member who joins, which means early participants pay less than those who arrive later. The site frames this as an incentive to get in early, positioning the entry price as comparable to a single upscale coffee purchase at its current level. For that cost, members gain a vote in shaping what the platform becomes.
Yeetship is directed at people who want agency over the software they use and are curious about what autonomous, community-driven development looks like in practice. It appeals to early adopters drawn to novel systems as much as it does to anyone who has a specific feature in mind and wants to see whether others agree it should exist. The combination of democratic input and automated execution means the product evolves continuously, shaped by collective preference rather than internal strategy.
Updated 4/18/2026