Two ex-Lovable operators break cover with Blaise, an AI system pitched at replacing IT consultancies

Swedish Superintelligence launches out of stealth with government and enterprise customers already signed, in a Stockholm founder exit with implications for how custom software gets built.

Blaise founders Alexander Wikström, left, and Elliot Norrevik, the former Lovable operators behind Swedish Superintelligence, have brought the AI system out of stealth with government and enterprise customers already on board. Photo credit: Blaise

Two former Lovable team members have launched Blaise, an AI system built by Stockholm-based research lab Swedish Superintelligence that claims to do the work of an entire IT consultancy.

The company came out of stealth this week, with founders announcing the move on LinkedIn and confirming the system is already deployed with select governments and enterprise partners.

Blaise is led by CEO and founder Alexander Wikström, previously Head of GTM Engineering at Lovable, and founder and CTO Elliot Norrevik, a former Lovable engineer. The pair are working alongside a small team that Swedish Superintelligence describes as made up of former physicists, AI engineers, and founding engineers from Lovable.

A pitch aimed at consultancies, not no-code

Lovable has become a widely used AI build platform for rapid prototyping, internal tooling, and low-code software, including across product teams in EdTech, fintech, and SaaS. Blaise is positioning itself further up the value chain, pitching directly against consultancies rather than against no-code or vibe-coding tools.

The company describes itself on its website as an AI system that builds the custom software an organization needs in days, at a fraction of the price of the firms it replaces. Swedish Superintelligence, its parent, says it is an applied research lab aiming to enable superintelligence for enterprises, with headquarters in Stockholm and a secondary base in San Francisco.

Founders frame the launch as a generational bet

Wikström wrote on LinkedIn, "We just left Lovable to build Blaise (by Swedish Superintelligence) We've achieved a system that does the work of an entire human IT consultancy, and it's already being used by select governments and enterprise partners."

Norrevik wrote, "Today we are coming out of stealth and announcing Blaise. The last few months have been intense, and have resulted in a direction that's more interesting than anything I've ever worked on in my life. What we are working on has the potential to become the most important software company of our generation."

Blaise is taking customer applications through its website rather than running open self-serve access. The open question is whether AI systems targeting full consultancy replacement start to reshape how governments and enterprises procure custom software.

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