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.
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.
Scaling to $140B–$324B by 2030–2034 (40–47% CAGR).
The ones that do return ~171% ROI. The bottleneck is trust, not ambition.
Gartner. 89% of CIOs call agentic AI a strategic priority.
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.
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.
| # | Capability | Field | Atomadic |
|---|---|---|---|
| A · Determinism & correctness | |||
| 1 | Deterministic output (same intent → same artifact) | ○ | ● |
| 2 | Proof / verification carried per artifact | ◐ | ● |
| 3 | Zero free parameters | ○ | ● |
| 4 | Map == terrain (spec matches output) | ○ | ● |
| 5 | Mission-critical-grade validation | ○ | ● |
| 6 | Reproducible builds | ◐ | ● |
| 7 | Zero-stub guarantee | ○ | ● |
| B · Emission velocity | |||
| 8 | Intent → product (not intent → snippet) | ○ | ● |
| 9 | Whole-product-line emission | ○ | ● |
| 10 | Self-emitting engine | ○ | ● |
| 11 | New product in days, not quarters | ◐ | ● |
| 12 | One engine, many products | ○ | ● |
| 13 | Re-emit on change (no hand-patching) | ○ | ● |
| 14 | Compounding (each emit widens what's buildable) | ○ | ● |
| C · Trust & payments | |||
| 15 | Native agent payments (x402 / USDC) | ● | ● |
| 16 | Trust gate before execution | ◐ | ● |
| 17 | Proof receipt per call | ○ | ● |
| 18 | Entitlement / scope gating | ◐ | ● |
| 19 | Sybil-resistant identity | ◐ | ● |
| 20 | Two-gate dispatch (commercial + sovereign) | ○ | ● |
| 21 | Unified metering rollup | ◐ | ● |
| D · Security & governance | |||
| 22 | Security by default (not bolt-on) | ○ | ● |
| 23 | Post-quantum hardening (FIPS 203) | ○ | ● |
| 24 | CVE mitigation at the gate | ◐ | ● |
| 25 | Compliance certs from proofs (EU AI Act / NIST / ISO) | ○ | ● |
| 26 | Hallucination bounds | ○ | ● |
| 27 | Tool-call inspection | ◐ | ● |
| 28 | Kill-switch / override lineage | ○ | ● |
| E · Production-readiness | |||
| 29 | Ships to production (not demo) | ◐ | ● |
| 30 | Deterministic repair | ○ | ● |
| 31 | 0-regression gate | ◐ | ● |
| 32 | Adversarial proving ground | ○ | ● |
| 33 | Audit trail per atom | ○ | ● |
| 34 | Append-only hash-chained receipts | ○ | ● |
| 35 | Rollback-safe | ● | ● |
| F · Sovereignty & moat | |||
| 36 | Self-hosted / sovereign | ○ | ● |
| 37 | No external-API dependence in the engine | ○ | ● |
| 38 | Owns its substrate | ○ | ● |
| 39 | Self-improving (under proof) | ◐ | ● |
| 40 | Lineage / provenance graph | ○ | ● |
| 41 | Capital efficiency (built solo, months) | ○ | ● |
| 42 | Category-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. | |||
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.
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.
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.