The Chinekezi brothers, Ted (22) and Jesse (20), have officially launched their flagship artificial intelligence platform, Multiverse, under their tech startup, Avatar and Qantum AI Technologies Limited, with operations based in Aba, Abia State, Nigeria.
The young programmers describe Multiverse as an advanced “vibe coder” designed to democratise software development across Africa by enabling users to build digital products using simple natural language instructions.
The platform is built to generate functional websites, applications, software systems, and other digital products directly from text prompts, removing the need for traditional programming skills.
According to the founders, the mission is to expand access to digital innovation and entrepreneurship opportunities for Africans who do not have formal engineering or computer science backgrounds.
Ted Chinekezi said the platform is designed to simplify software creation, stating that “whatever you ask it to do for you in terms of software, it will do it.”
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He added that “you can demand a website for your law firm, a fashion brand, or an app that tracks speed limits, it takes your prompt and codes it.”
Jesse Chinekezi said the system was developed with accessibility in mind, noting that “those facing disabilities can equally make use of Multiverse to create something.”
He explained that the platform is intended to reduce barriers to entry in technology and encourage broader participation in digital innovation across different social and educational backgrounds.
The platform also incorporates features aimed at supporting users with limited technical literacy, allowing them to interact with the system using plain language inputs rather than coding syntax.
The launch from Aba, a city traditionally known for manufacturing, commerce, and small-scale industrial innovation, signals a growing shift toward deep tech and artificial intelligence development within Nigeria’s emerging startup landscape.
The brothers said Multiverse reflects their broader ambition to position African developers and entrepreneurs within the global AI economy through accessible software-building tools that accelerate product development and innovation.
They added that the platform is part of a wider vision to build a technology structure where Africans can create, deploy, and scale software solutions without relying heavily on external technical infrastructure.
