Skip to main content

LunchBadger

LunchBadger is a company focused on tools and platforms for designing, composing, and managing APIs and microservices for cloud-native applications.

  • Application Programming Interface (API) lifecycle management and composition for cloud-native applications.
  • Visual design and modeling of APIs and microservices architectures.
  • Support for microservices-based integration patterns and service orchestration.
  • Tooling geared toward DevOps workflows and continuous delivery of API-centric services.
  • Focus on cloud-native deployment environments and modern application backends.

More About LunchBadger

LunchBadger provides software aimed at organizations that build and operate API-centric and microservices-based systems, particularly in cloud-native environments. Its offerings focus on the lifecycle of APIs and services, from design and modeling through deployment and runtime management. The company targets technical stakeholders such as enterprise architects, platform owners, and DevOps teams who need to coordinate many services and APIs across multiple environments.

The platform is positioned for use in environments where microservices and APIs form the core integration mechanism between backend systems, client applications, and third-party services. LunchBadger’s tooling is aligned with practices common in cloud-native architectures, including container-based deployment, service decomposition, and continuous delivery. It is designed to support teams that maintain distributed systems composed of multiple internal and external APIs.

From a technology domain perspective, LunchBadger aligns with categories such as API management (API lifecycle), microservices design (application architecture), and cloud DevOps (DevOps tooling). The platform centers on visual and model-driven approaches to defining APIs, describing service interactions, and capturing dependencies among microservices. This modeling supports more predictable deployment and change management for large service portfolios.

The company’s tools typically integrate with existing Continuous Integration and Continuous Deployment (CI/CD) pipelines and infrastructure automation used in DevOps practices. By mapping services and APIs in a structured way, LunchBadger can be used in conjunction with container orchestration platforms and service routing components, such as API gateways or service meshes, although the exact integrations depend on how an enterprise configures its stack. The emphasis is on enabling teams to see, manage, and evolve their service topology in a controlled manner.

Within an enterprise IT marketplace or directory, LunchBadger fits into categories including API management, microservices design and composition, and cloud-native DevOps enablement. It is relevant for organizations modernizing legacy applications into microservices, building new digital products around APIs, or coordinating multiple teams that contribute services to a shared platform. The focus on API and microservices modeling positions LunchBadger as a tool for governance, planning, and operational alignment across distributed application teams.

At-A-Glance

  • Employees: 5
  • Estimated Annual Revenue: $0-$1M

Connect

Corporate Headquarters

4533 Macarthur Boulevard
5039
Newport Beach, CA 92660

Market Segmentation

  • Type: Private
  • Sector: Information Technology
  • Group: Software & Services
  • Industry: Internet Software & Services
  • Sub-Industry: Internet Software & Services