The Last Time We Saw Growth Like This, It Was Fake Beer Apps; Now It’s AI Apps

The Last Time We Saw Growth Like This It Was Fake Beer Apps
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Remember that app where you could tilt your phone and it would look like you’re drinking a beer? Or the one where you’d swipe your screen and a fake lighter flickered back at you?

They were completely pointless, but that was one of the last times the app market saw a near-50% CAGR. Some 20 years later, we’re apparently set to see it again.

The AI application market is set to jump from about $6 billion in 2025 to more than $40 billion by 2030, something like 48% annual growth.

Bar graph titled AI App Market Revenue, 2024-2030 (billion USD)
AI app market is set to double within the next few years. Source: Next Move Strategy Consulting

The broader application hosting market is expected to double over the same period.

This is not surprising, of course. Hosting providers, especially in that mid-market tier, are starting to package AI application hosting directly into their platforms as something that exists alongside everything else.

Take a look at some of the most recent rollouts from mid-level hosting providers, like hosting.com.

The company just introduced AI application hosting, which allows users to launch and manage hundreds of applications with little to no setup — aka, the one-click deployment equivalent to web building.

Wix picked up Base44 in 2025 and turned its one-step app generation into part of its larger AI push with Harmony in 2026. Around the same time, Hostinger rolled out Horizons, bundling app creation, hosting, and deployment.

A screenshot of sample product from hosting.com's AI application hosting
A glance at hosting.com’s new AI application hosting and deployment services. Source: hosting.com

Different providers, same idea — but this became really possible when OpenClaw hit the market, though it’s not clear if Hosting.com is using that specifically.

Whether it’s powered by something like OpenClaw almost feels beside the point. What hosting providers like hosting.com are doing now is taking that same idea and going one layer deeper so it’s consumable by the average joe, as in, instead of just making agents easier to run, they’re making sure they’re already there, packaged, managed, and ready to go.

The skeptic in me says this is one step closer to an “I, Robot” world. The optimist sees a more accessible, more customizable web. Regardless, hosts are the ones deciding how that’ll play out.