Base44 Prompt Generator

Base44 turns plain-language descriptions into complete working apps, with the database, auth, storage, and hosting all built in. That batteries-included design changes how you should prompt it: the platform already owns the infrastructure, so the prompt's job is to nail the product. Archly structures your idea exactly that way.

Why prompting Base44 is different

  • Base44 builds around your data model. Its built-in database thinks in entities and relationships, and a prompt that defines them explicitly gets a coherent app where a vague one gets a generic scaffold.
  • Everything is included, which means the classic mistake is asking it to integrate Supabase, Firebase, or Auth0. It has its own database, auth, and storage; prompts that reference external services add complexity and break builds.
  • One monolithic prompt for the whole app misses the structure. Base44 rewards settling the plan first, then building feature by feature.

How Archly structures prompts for Base44

  • The Base44 platform profile frames your idea entity-first: data objects, relationships, and user roles before features, matching how Base44 actually builds.
  • Archly's intake keeps the brief in product terms and steers you away from external-service requests Base44 does not need.
  • Features come out as separate scoped prompts, so each build request is small enough to land cleanly and refine.

Frequently asked questions

What makes a good Base44 prompt?

Entities first. Name your data objects, their relationships, and who can see what, then describe features and screens in plain product terms. Base44 provides the infrastructure, so the prompt should define the product, not the stack.

Should I ask Base44 to integrate Supabase or Auth0?

No. Base44 has its own built-in database, user management, and storage. Asking for external services it already replaces adds complexity and commonly breaks builds. Archly's Base44 profile keeps prompts inside the platform's built-ins.

Is Base44 good for non-technical founders?

Yes, it is one of the most beginner-friendly builders since there is nothing external to wire up. Pairing it with Archly means your idea arrives as a structured, entity-first prompt instead of a loose description, which is where most beginner builds go wrong.

Archly also works with

Lovable, Bolt, v0, Cursor, Replit, Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, Antigravity, AI Studio, Anything AI, and more.