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Startup Autopsy Laboratory

Your idea has a fatal flaw.
Find it for $1.

Four AI examiners find the flaw that'll kill your idea — and what to do about it. Live data, not stale assumptions. Verdict in 60 seconds. No account.

Latest verdict

AIREA OS already ships 80% of this in your exact market — your survival depends on whether Hindi/Tagalog transcription is a wedge or a feature request they'll fill in 90 days.

Case no.

4471

Examiners

4 agents

Status

Examination complete

Subject — idea submitted

An app that reminds you to drink water

Preliminary scan — agent findings

Market

No moat detected

Tech

Commodity execution

Finance

Negative unit econ

Timing

Market saturation

Cause of deathtap to reveal

There are 200 of these on the App Store. The good news ends there.

🔥 ROASTED
2/10

No account · No signup · Verdict in 60 seconds · $1 flat · 2-min walkthrough

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What a roast actually does to an idea

Idea in. Fatal flaw out. Pivot clear.

01 — Idea submitted✓ received

An app that reminds you to drink water and tracks your daily intake

examining
02 — Market examinerfatal flaw

There are 200 of these on the App Store. The top three are free. Apple Health tracks this passively. You're asking someone to change a habit for a problem they've already accepted.

pivot
03 — Founder insight

"Daily water tracker for kidney stone patients."

Their doctor told them to drink 3L. They have a medical reason to care. Charge accordingly.

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How good is your idea, really?

Full panel ($1)

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0 ideas autopsied
avg score 4.4/10
only 0% survived
no account · $1 flat

The full range

Not every idea gets roasted

The verdict depends on the idea. Here's what each outcome looks like.

SHIP IT
8.5/10

IFTA compliance software for owner-operator truckers — automates fuel receipts, mileage logs, and quarterly state filings. $49/month.

Mandatory compliance, captive audience, no modern SaaS incumbent. The regulatory moat is real.

Market

IFTA compliance costs owner-operators 8–12 hrs/quarter. TruckingOffice and Q7 are legacy desktop. No modern SaaS owns this niche.

Finance

$49/mo with near-zero voluntary churn — compliance software is involuntary. CAC via trucking Facebook groups runs sub-$40.

Why it passes

Regulatory moat, near-zero voluntary churn, reachable niche via trucking communities. No fatal assumption in the analysis — the panel cleared it.

~ DECENT
6.5/10

AI meeting summaries for solo consultants — auto-generates client-ready notes from recordings. $12/month.

Right pain, wrong market. Otter.ai owns the generic case. The moat is in the liability, not the transcription.

Market

Generic meeting notes is saturated. But financial advisors and lawyers need compliance-grade records — a legal audit trail, not just a summary.

Timing

SEC and FCA record-keeping requirements tightened in 2024. Regulated consultants are actively shopping. Window is open.

Pivot

Narrow to compliance-grade records for regulated advisors (financial, legal). Double the price. The audit trail is the product, not the summary.

🔥 ROASTED
2.5/10

A social network for dog owners — share photos, find local playdates, discover dog-friendly venues.

BarkHappy, Dogster, and Meetup.com already lost this war. Facebook Groups won by default.

Market

Five funded attempts at this exist. All pivoted or shut down. Facebook Groups solve the core use case for free with the existing audience already there.

Finance

Niche social networks require critical mass before any monetization. CAC exceeds $80 before the first dollar of revenue. Math does not work.

Full panel — example output

Here's exactly what $1 gets you

A real analysis, shown in full. Every agent finding. Every red flag. Every action. Nothing cut.

Subject — idea submitted

A subscription app that teaches kids to code through interactive games — $9.99/month

NEEDS WORK
4.5/10

The verdict

Code.org has $70M in backing and is free. You're selling what they give away.

🔍Market Agent
live data

Market is real but brutally crowded. Scratch, Code.org (backed by Bezos and Zuckerberg), Tynker ($130M+ raised), and Khan Academy dominate with free products. Your $9.99/mo is competing against free.

⚙️Tech Agent

Technical execution is straightforward — no moat in the stack. A two-person team at any of the 30+ existing edtech players could replicate your MVP in a sprint. Interactive coding games are a solved UI problem.

💰Finance Agent

CAC for children's apps through paid social runs $35–80. At $9.99/mo, payback is 4–8 months. Churn in kids' apps is brutal — content requirements are constant and parents cancel when interest wanes after week three.

⏱️Timing Agent

Edtech had its window during COVID lockdowns. The spike that launched Duolingo's explosive growth and pushed parents to pay for home learning tools has largely closed. School districts are now actively pushing back on screen time.

Competitors found during analysis

Live data

Code.org

$70M+ raised

Free. Backed by Bezos, Zuckerberg, Gates. 70M+ students. Your primary obstacle.

Tynker

$130M raised

Paid curriculum. Already in 100,000 schools. Direct competitor with a decade head start.

Scratch (MIT)

Non-profit raised

Free forever. 100M registered users. Sets the price expectation: zero.

Cause of death

01

Free competitors with massive backing

The market leader charges nothing. Overcoming free requires a 10x experience advantage or a different distribution channel entirely.

02

Post-COVID edtech churn

Retention data from the 2021–2023 edtech boom shows median churn of 40–60% after month two once novelty wears off. The TAM is real; the LTV is not.

03

Wrong decision-maker

Children don't pay. Parents pay — and they are already overwhelmed with subscription fatigue. The gap isn't better coding games; it's trust and habit formation.

⚠ Blind spot

You're building for the child but selling to the parent. The parent's actual fear isn't "will my kid learn to code" — it's "will they actually use this after day four." No amount of game design solves the abandonment problem without a retention loop aimed at the parent, not the kid.

Recommended intervention

01.

Call 5 after-school program directors this week — not to sell, to ask what they spend on curriculum and what problem they can't solve. You need 3 "yes, that's real" signals before building anything.

02.

Price one district pilot at $5k for 90 days, all-in. Remove the budget objection so you can test the actual product.

03.

Kill the parent-facing subscription page. Every hour spent on B2C conversion is a distraction from the channel that can actually scale.

04.

Map the procurement cycle for one specific district type (e.g. Title I schools — federal funding available, underserved, motivated). That's your wedge.

05.

Sign up for Duolingo for Schools and spend 30 minutes understanding exactly what they don't offer. That gap is your pitch.

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Case files on record

Recent examinations

Full archive →
Case #0001 NEEDS WORK

Subject

What Tovira is A WhatsApp assistant for UAE solo real estate agents. No app, no CRM, no dashboard. What Tovira solves UAE solo agents lose deals to forgotten follow-ups, not competitors. They work in WhatsApp between viewings — CRMs that require a laptop don't fit how they actually work, so they get abandoned within 60 days. What Tovira does Captures leads from forwarded Bayut/Property Finder/WhatsApp messages — extracts name, phone, budget, requirements automatically Transcribes voice notes after viewings in English/Arabic/Hindi/Urdu/Tagalog Tracks promises made in conversations ("I'll send the brochure Friday") and reminds you before you forget Reminds you about confirmed viewings on a 4hr / 1hr / 10min ladder Alerts you when leads go cold (24hr for VIPs, 48hr for hot leads, 5 days for standard) Answers pipeline questions in plain English ("who's hot in Marina under 5M", "what did Sarah say last week") Matches new listings to leads in your pipeline automatically Generates a daily morning briefing of what needs your attention

Cause of death

AIREA OS already ships 80% of this in your exact market — your survival depends on whether Hindi/Tagalog transcription is a wedge or a feature request they'll fill in 90 days.

Case #0002 NEEDS WORK

Subject

The Startup Video Press Release Builder an interactive , AI assisted SaaS platform empowers founders to instantly transform complex startup stories into articles for traditional and social media, audio jingles for radio and podcast advertising, narrated videos like taking business cards or product sales sheets, press releases and more without needing any editing expertise. Designed for rapid distribution, it streamlines the creation of shareable video assets that capture attention and drive media coverage more effectively than traditional text-only announcements.

Cause of death

You're building a feature bundle competing against The PR Builder's distribution moat and Elai.io's video quality — with zero distribution of your own.

Case #0003 NEEDS WORK

Subject

The gaming market is highly fragmented, but at its core are game developers and publishers. I want to create a software platform that helps smaller game teams navigate player noise when they release a game — or even before launching one. The platform would analyze player sentiment around games and updates in real time, helping developers better understand what players actually think. The software would identify the most common issues players are experiencing, as well as the features and mechanics they genuinely enjoy. It would also segment player feedback by behavior patterns — for example, distinguishing between habitual complainers whose feedback may not be actionable, and high-value players whose opinions should carry more weight. This would provide real-time intelligence that helps development teams make better decisions about their current game, upcoming updates, and even future game concepts. Over time, the platform would also build a large database of player sentiment, genre trends, and behavioral insights across the gaming market.

Cause of death

You're describing Affogata's existing product at a price point you haven't validated, with zero data infrastructure to compete on accuracy.

Standard examination protocol

How it works

INTAKE

01

Submit the specimen

Describe your idea — what you're building, who it's for, where you stand. Rough is fine. The agents do the research.

EXAMINATION

02

Four agents convene

Market pulls live competitor data. Tech assesses execution risk. Finance runs the unit economics. Timing checks if the window is open.

VERDICT

03

Cause of death filed

A survival tier, a one-line verdict, the strongest case for your idea, the top kill shots, the blind spot you missed, founder fit assessment, and 3–5 specific actions to take in the next 7 days. Permanent and shareable.

Our forensic specialists

Why not a
generalist AI?

A general-purpose model is optimized to keep you engaged — it will validate your idea. Our four-agent panel is optimized to tell you the flaw that will kill it.

MKT-01live data

Market Examiner

Runs live competitor searches before filing a report. Only cites what it actually finds — not training-data guesses.

TECH-01

Technical Examiner

Evaluates execution risk and build complexity. Determines whether the moat is defensible or just a feature someone ships in a sprint.

FIN-01

Financial Examiner

Dissects unit economics, CAC, and LTV. Determines whether the business model survives contact with real margins.

TIME-01

Timing Examiner

Determines if the window is open, closing, or already shut. Checks whether you're early, on time, or two years late.

Common questions

Before you ask

Is this just ChatGPT with a prompt?

No. Four separate agents run in parallel — each with a specific mandate and access to live data. Market pulls real competitor funding and traction data. Finance runs actual unit economics. You get structured findings, not a pep talk.

What if my idea scores well?

Then you have evidence, not just optimism. A score of 8+ with agent-backed reasoning is something you can show a co-founder, investor, or your own doubting brain. Most ideas score between 4 and 7 — that's where the real work starts.

How is this different from asking a mentor or advisor?

Advisors give you their opinion. This gives you a structured breakdown across four failure dimensions — market, tech, finance, and timing — with live data attached. No bias, no social niceties, no 45-minute coffee meeting.

Ideas are now infinite.
Good ones still aren't.

No validation theater. No cheerleading.

For autonomous agents

The validation layer for the agent economy

Any autonomous agent can call /api/roast/free for a no-cost sanity check, or pay $1 via HTTP 402 at /api/agent for the full structured verdict.

"Rover already buried this with $200M. You're late.""Great UX. Zero moat. You'll be copied in six weeks.""The market exists. You just can't reach it for under $200 CAC.""This isn't a startup. It's a feature request to an existing product.""Your timing is two years off. The window opened and closed.""Four funded competitors. Three of them are pivoting away. That's a signal.""Lovely idea. Terrible unit economics. The math doesn't work.""You're solving a problem people tolerate, not one they'll pay to fix.""Quibi raised $1.75B and discovered people watch TikTok on their commute, not prestige short films.""Juicero built a $400 WiFi juicer. A journalist squeezed the bags by hand. Same result.""Notion already owns this shelf. You're building a feature, not a company.""The problem is real. The $29/month price point is not.""AIREA OS already ships 80% of this in your exact market — your survival depends on whether Hindi/Tagalog transcription is a wedge or a feature request they'll fill in 90 days.""You're building a feature bundle competing against The PR Builder's distribution moat and Elai.io's video quality — with zero distribution of your own.""You're describing Affogata's existing product at a price point you haven't validated, with zero data infrastructure to compete on accuracy.""Clubhouse proved live audio demand exists, then watched Twitter, Spotify, and LinkedIn ship the same feature to 3 billion users for free.""You're pitching Google Glass in 2026 — the product that literally coined the term "Glasshole" — into a market where Meta and Apple spend more on optics R&D than your entire valuation.""You spent $11.8M to earn $619K, then aired a Super Bowl ad for a sock puppet — Chewy did it right sixteen years later by solving logistics first.""WeWork burned $2B+ per year proving that signing 15-year leases to sell monthly memberships is not a tech company — it's a suicide pact with a landlord.""Rover already buried this with $200M. You're late.""Great UX. Zero moat. You'll be copied in six weeks.""The market exists. You just can't reach it for under $200 CAC.""This isn't a startup. It's a feature request to an existing product.""Your timing is two years off. The window opened and closed.""Four funded competitors. Three of them are pivoting away. That's a signal.""Lovely idea. Terrible unit economics. The math doesn't work.""You're solving a problem people tolerate, not one they'll pay to fix.""Quibi raised $1.75B and discovered people watch TikTok on their commute, not prestige short films.""Juicero built a $400 WiFi juicer. A journalist squeezed the bags by hand. Same result.""Notion already owns this shelf. You're building a feature, not a company.""The problem is real. The $29/month price point is not.""AIREA OS already ships 80% of this in your exact market — your survival depends on whether Hindi/Tagalog transcription is a wedge or a feature request they'll fill in 90 days.""You're building a feature bundle competing against The PR Builder's distribution moat and Elai.io's video quality — with zero distribution of your own.""You're describing Affogata's existing product at a price point you haven't validated, with zero data infrastructure to compete on accuracy.""Clubhouse proved live audio demand exists, then watched Twitter, Spotify, and LinkedIn ship the same feature to 3 billion users for free.""You're pitching Google Glass in 2026 — the product that literally coined the term "Glasshole" — into a market where Meta and Apple spend more on optics R&D than your entire valuation.""You spent $11.8M to earn $619K, then aired a Super Bowl ad for a sock puppet — Chewy did it right sixteen years later by solving logistics first.""WeWork burned $2B+ per year proving that signing 15-year leases to sell monthly memberships is not a tech company — it's a suicide pact with a landlord."