We build the execution layer for the agentic era.
Agentic Empire builds infrastructure, platforms, and products for agent-authored software. Axint is the first public line: the runtime for agent-built Apple-native software — compile, check, run, repair, and coordinate every coding agent that touches the project.
Coding agents can write Swift. Axint is how they ship it. More lines will land on the same execution stack once Apple is fully hardened.
Agentic Empire operates across the stack beneath agent output: infrastructure, developer platforms, and products that can survive hard platform contracts. Apple is the first proving ground because the rules are strict enough to expose what is real.
define*() call replaces 50–200 lines of Swift, but the wedge is the loop around it: axint run orchestrates xcodebuild on your Mac, Cloud Check returns a verdict, and the shared .axint truth layer keeps every coding agent on the same project from racing.Apple is where agent-written software stops sounding impressive and starts meeting hard constraints: App Intents contracts, WidgetKit structure, entitlements, plist requirements, build settings, signing, and review.
That is why we start here. If agents can ship reliably on Apple — through one runtime, with multi-agent coordination, on a real Mac, against real `xcodebuild` and real `.xcresult` — the execution layer is real. Axint already runs that loop.
What is real right now.
These proof points map to the current Axint release, docs, registry, and product surface area. This is not a speculative roadmap page. It is a status page for what already exists.
Nima Nejat has spent two decades shipping software and leading development teams across healthcare, rideshare, creator platforms, consumer apps, games, and other verticals, with time on the capital side as well. Agentic Empire is the synthesis: product sense, platform thinking, and a bias toward building where the constraints are hardest.