The short version
Lovable and Mana both let you describe an app and have it built for you. They diverge on the question that matters most: where does the app end up, and how much work is between you and a running result?
Lovable generates a full-stack web project — typically React, Tailwind, and a Supabase backend — that you then host, usually on a desktop. It’s a genuinely strong tool if your destination is a website or a web SaaS, and if you’re comfortable owning the deployment.
Mana takes a different stance. You describe the app in a chat on your phone, and it runs immediately inside Mana — no hosting decision, no deploy, no laptop. When it’s ready, you publish it to Mana’s discovery feed and it’s in front of an audience the same day.
Who should pick which
Reach for Lovable when the output you want is a standalone web app you’ll own and host, and when you build at a desk. Its code ownership and Supabase/GitHub integrations are real advantages for that path.
Reach for Mana when you want the shortest possible loop from idea to a live, shareable app — and especially when you want to build from your phone without ever touching a terminal or a hosting dashboard.
A quick example
Say you want a habit tracker for your friends. With Lovable you’d generate the project, connect a database, deploy it, and send people a URL. With Mana you’d describe it, watch it run on your phone, and publish it so anyone can open and use it inside Mana — no infrastructure in between.