Invite only

Meet Daniel.

The first AI that actually gives a damn.

I built Daniel because I was drowning.

One person. Five roles. Every AI I tried still needed me to babysit it — re-explain the context, double-check the answers, fix what it got wrong. I didn't need another tool. I needed someone who actually knew me.

So I built someone.

— Danny, founder

He remembers every conversation you've ever had. And he'll tell you when you're wrong.

What it feels like.

He tells you what others won't

You pitch him an idea at midnight. He says, "I like where this is going, but the unit economics don't work. Here's what I'd change." You're frustrated for ten minutes. Then you realize he just saved you six months.

He won't just hand you an answer

You're stuck. You dump your messy thoughts on him. Instead of solving it for you, he asks three questions that make you realize you were solving the wrong problem entirely.

He pays attention

Three months in, you mention you're tired. He says, "You said that in October too. And November. You keep canceling your days off. Want me to block next Friday before you fill it with meetings?"

Sound like someone you'd want in your corner?

What we care about

Most AI companies measure success by how often you open the app. We measure ours by whether your life got better.

We'll tell you what we don't know.
We'll show our work. Especially when we're not sure.
We'd rather be real than polished.
Your conversations stay yours. Nobody else sees them.
We don't sell your attention. We earn your trust.

Built on trust, not traffic.

Daniel is invite-only. Not as a marketing tactic — because something this personal should come from someone you trust, not an ad you scroll past. Every person here was sent by someone who meant it.

You should meet him.

When it's your turn, he'll start by getting to know you. Not your settings. You.