Investor Overview · 2026

We don't build products.
We emit them.

Atomadic is an intent compiler for software.

Describe what you want; the engine emits a complete, verified product — deterministically. The entire Atomadic product line was emitted by the engine itself. Velocity is the moat.

Request access See the 42-point analysis
The market

A market racing toward agents — and hitting a wall.

Agentic AI is one of the fastest-growing categories in software. But the same research that sizes the opportunity also names the problem: most agents can't be trusted in production. That gap is the opportunity Atomadic is built for.

$9–40B
Agentic AI market, 2026

Scaling to $140B–$324B by 2030–2034 (40–47% CAGR).

88%
of AI agents never reach production

The ones that do return ~171% ROI. The bottleneck is trust, not ambition.

40%
of enterprise apps embed agents by end-2026

Gartner. 89% of CIOs call agentic AI a strategic priority.

Dig deeper — the numbers and where they come from
Market sizing varies by methodology: application-layer estimates land near $9.1–10.9B for 2026 (Mordor, Grand View), while broad-definition estimates reach ~$40B (Information Matters, range $33–48B). Long-range: $139–324B by 2034. Production gap and ROI from OneReach's 2026 adoption study; enterprise embedding from Gartner; copilots in ~80% of workplace apps by 2026 from IDC.
Sources: fortunebusinessinsights · mordorintelligence · informationmatters · market.us · onereach.ai
The wedge

The field guesses. Atomadic proves.

Today's coding agents are probabilistic: they generate plausible code and hope it's right. That's why they hallucinate, fail tool calls, and stall before production. Atomadic is deterministic and proof-carrying by design — the direction the whole field is now trying to reach.

State of the art (LLM agents)

  • Probabilistic — "can generate any string of code without regard to correctness"
  • Hallucinations are a named failure mode; ~36% of agent runs hit tool-use failures
  • Validation "far from strong enough for mission-critical applications"
  • Helps a human write code, snippet by snippet
  • 88% never reach production

Atomadic (intent compiler)

  • Deterministic — same intent in, same verified artifact out
  • Every artifact carries a proof or an explicit status; zero stubs
  • Map == terrain: the spec and the emitted code are held identical
  • Emits a complete, tiered product — not a snippet
  • Built to ship: gated, receipted, rollback-safe
Dig deeper — why deterministic + proof-carrying is the frontier
The 2026 formal-verification literature converges on one point: probabilistic generation can't be trusted for mission-critical code, and deterministic generation is becoming the default for well-specified, high-volume workflows. Verified-codegen research (AlphaVerus, Veritas, SPARK/Ada, CNF-guided synthesis) is racing to bolt proofs onto LLM output. Atomadic starts there: determinism and proof-carrying emission are the engine's native design, not a retrofit.
Sources: arXiv 2507.13290 · 2604.05150 · 2502.07728 · 2412.06176 (AlphaVerus) · 2506.00005 (Veritas) · lubis-eda.com
The 42-point analysis

Where Atomadic stands vs the state of the art

An honest, six-dimension scorecard against the SOTA field — AI coding agents (Cursor, Copilot, Claude Code, Devin), agent infrastructure (x402, LangChain), and verification platforms. We lead on determinism, emission velocity, and sovereignty. We're explicit where the field leads us: adoption and ecosystem maturity. They're shipping at scale; we're early — and built right.

● Leads◐ Partial○ Absent / early
#CapabilityFieldAtomadic
A · Determinism & correctness
1Deterministic output (same intent → same artifact)
2Proof / verification carried per artifact
3Zero free parameters
4Map == terrain (spec matches output)
5Mission-critical-grade validation
6Reproducible builds
7Zero-stub guarantee
B · Emission velocity
8Intent → product (not intent → snippet)
9Whole-product-line emission
10Self-emitting engine
11New product in days, not quarters
12One engine, many products
13Re-emit on change (no hand-patching)
14Compounding (each emit widens what's buildable)
C · Trust & payments
15Native agent payments (x402 / USDC)
16Trust gate before execution
17Proof receipt per call
18Entitlement / scope gating
19Sybil-resistant identity
20Two-gate dispatch (commercial + sovereign)
21Unified metering rollup
D · Security & governance
22Security by default (not bolt-on)
23Post-quantum hardening (FIPS 203)
24CVE mitigation at the gate
25Compliance certs from proofs (EU AI Act / NIST / ISO)
26Hallucination bounds
27Tool-call inspection
28Kill-switch / override lineage
E · Production-readiness
29Ships to production (not demo)
30Deterministic repair
310-regression gate
32Adversarial proving ground
33Audit trail per atom
34Append-only hash-chained receipts
35Rollback-safe
F · Sovereignty & moat
36Self-hosted / sovereign
37No external-API dependence in the engine
38Owns its substrate
39Self-improving (under proof)
40Lineage / provenance graph
41Capital efficiency (built solo, months)
42Category-defining (no direct competitor)
Where the field leads us today
Adoption at scale, ecosystem/integration breadth, and brand maturity — the incumbents ship to millions today. Atomadic is early. The thesis: the architecture that's right wins the production market the incumbents can't reach.
Dig deeper — how each row is scored
Scores reflect the SOTA field, not a single vendor, and trace to the cited research: determinism/correctness rows to the 2026 formal-verification literature (probabilistic LLM codegen can't guarantee correctness); payments rows to the x402 ecosystem (where the field genuinely leads — row 15 is a tie); production rows to the 88%-never-ship finding. Atomadic ● marks designed-and-built capability; the field's ● marks where incumbents lead (payments, adoption, rollback tooling). Nothing here is a fabricated competitor score — each ○/◐/● ties to a source in the analysis base.
The proof

The engine built the company.

The strongest evidence that an intent compiler works is that it emitted its own product line. Fuse, Nexus, Security, Healer, Evolve, the Proving Ground — dozens of products, thousands of verified modules — emitted from one engine, by one founder, in months, not years. That's the velocity a buyer is really underwriting.

Dozens
of products, one engine
Thousands
of verified modules emitted
Months
solo, not years with a team

Figures are kept deliberately round: the engine emits continuously, so any exact count is stale the day it's printed. Precise, current metrics are available under access.

Next step

See what the engine does now.

You may have seen earlier versions of Fuse and Nexus. The engine has moved a long way since. Request access for a live walkthrough and the current, precise numbers.

Request access See the product →