Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang, who has done more than almost anyone to power the AI revolution, made a striking claim on the All-In podcast last year. AI, he predicted, will create more millionaires in the next five years than the internet did in its first twenty.
His reasoning was simple: AI has erased the gap between having a good idea and actually building it.
The unlock is vibe coding - a term coined by AI researcher Andrej Karpathy for the practice of building software by conversing with an AI rather than writing code. With vibe coding you describe what you want, it generates it, you paste the errors back when something breaks, and you iterate. No syntax. No degree. No bootcamp.
The gap between "I have an idea" and "I have an app" has collapsed to a weekend.
Which brings us to the questions that actually matters ... how good is your idea, and do you have what it takes to be an AI millionaire.
We're here to help get you started. Test yourself with these fifteen questions, ascending difficulty, covering everything from the basics of the stack to the decisions that separate people who ship from people who scroll.
15 questions. Three levels. Two checkpoints. One question that has killed funded startups. Do you have what it takes?
- Questions get harder as you go
- Checkpoint summaries every 5 questions
- Answer explanations after each question
- Your score revealed at the end
If you made it to the end, here's what your score means.
You got all the early questions right: you know the tools. And, you got the middle questions right: you've probably shipped something and know what you're. Final questions right — evals, cascading agent failures, why most AI startups die — you're thinking like an operator.
Huang's prediction isn't wishful thinking. It's arithmetic. The only variable is whether you do something with it.