The title is, no surprise, clickbait bullshit. They’re making it sound like they vibe coded a game and it sold $25k in copies to real people in just two weeks, when in fact they participated in a competition
specifically about vibe coding games and the prize was $25k. That’s meaningless.
The content of the article is also made of meaningless statements meant to sound impressive:
> every year the games get noticeably better. 2026 is the second run.
Yeah, you can’t in good faith make an “every year” assessment for something which has happened twice.