While most artificial intelligence platforms claim to serve everyone, SuperQueen AI is taking a different approach: designing technology specifically for women from the ground up with women coders and innovators. The platform represents an effort to address a gap in the tech industry, where products often treat female users as an afterthought rather than the primary audience.
The company is developing what it calls a women-centered AI ecosystem that combines three distinct areas: personal safety features, lifestyle automation tools, and empowerment resources at different levels. It’s an ambitious scope that reflects how women’s technology needs often span categories that companies typically keep separate.
Safety Technology Meets Daily Life
At the hardware level, SuperQueen AI has developed a safety alarm that uses a 130-decibel siren and flashing lights. The device is part of a broader vision that includes ride tracking capabilities and safety wearables. These aren’t new concepts individually, but the integration of AI-powered safety tools for women into a larger ecosystem distinguishes the approach from standalone safety apps or devices.
The company has also created intellectual property around its brand identity, including a copyrighted mascot called the “SuperQueen Bunny,” which it refers to as a “Crownbearer.” The branding emphasizes what the company calls a “Digital Crown” concept, positioning the technology as something that confers dignity rather than simply solving problems. The platform aims to help women reclaim their time and energy, provide safety and peace of mind, and protect their health and wellness at all levels.

Community Before Launch
SuperQueen AI is building its user base before releasing a full product. The Founding Queen Program offers early beta testing access, while an Ambassador Search aims to identify women globally who can represent the platform. This community-first strategy is increasingly common among startups that need feedback and advocacy.
The company has scheduled a Kickstarter campaign for 2026 under the banner “Crownfunding the Future of Women.” The wordplay on crowdfunding signals an attempt to differentiate from typical tech fundraising by emphasizing gender-specific community support. Whether this resonates with backers will test how much appetite exists for women-focused AI platforms in a market where gender-specific technology often struggles to scale beyond niche audiences.
Long-term Vision Ahead
SuperQueen AI’s roadmap targets several milestones over the next three years: launching a minimum viable product, securing pre-seed funding, growing to to thousands of Founding Queens and community members, and establishing partnerships in femtech, AI, and wearable safety technology. Starting with US users, the company plans international expansion as it evolves.

The real question facing SuperQueen AI is whether a women-only approach can achieve the scale necessary to sustain ongoing development. Technology platforms typically need massive user bases to justify continued investment in integrated lifestyle and safety technology. By limiting its market to roughly half the population by design, the company is betting that depth of engagement within that audience will compensate for breadth.
SuperQueen AI Founder Shemie Breitenbach believes that elevating women will benefit families and humanity as a whole. “Women wholeheartedly raise boys and girls and take care of men and women. Progress for women is progress for all. When women rise, humanity rises,” Breitenbach boldly said.


