I created a tool that turns AI agents into white collar employees.

I created a tool that turns AI agents into white collar employees.

I've never posted on this community or seen what other people post, so I don't know if this is impressive or not, but I just want to share what I've been working on.

For some background:

I tried vibe coding a ton of SaaS and other applications but none of them worked out. Actually before the big AI train, I was actually coding a real app by hand (yeah, crazy). I was working on it for months but eventually the AI era had begun. AI literally finished all my pending tasks in 1 day. Tasks that would've took so much more time. Regardless, it didn't work out.

I kept doing more and more research about how to be successful but almost half of the crowd is saying you can't be successful by vibe coding and and the other half is saying you can't be successful without using AI these days. So I didn't know what to do anymore.

What I did:

So I created an application called AgentLeague. I'm not selling it, I just wanted to share it. AgentLeague is a multi agent platform that does the prompting for you. It is set up like a real company with roles such as Director, Project Managers, developers (both backend and frontend), marketing (with a specialty in SEO tactics), UI designers, and much more.

How it works:

The way it works is you only ever talk with the director. You tell him ("I want to make X project") and the director talks to you about the feasibility of the project. He asks questions to ensure he fully understands what you want. Then, he creates an office with a project manager leading it. The director prompts the project manager with all the context he learned about what you want to make. The project manager then decides what roles are needed and spawns those agents. The agents will have their own meeting, write their own BRD (sometimes they argue amongst each other), and then span out to work on their tasks. They constantly work together and sometimes even talk to agents in other offices to get advice/help. It's a full company.

The entire tool runs on headless claude and codex, so the user is never needed for permissions. If the agents need an API key or the user to do something on the web, there is a way for them to ask for that. But all conversation only goes through the director. There's even a skill for them to create scheduled tasks, pipelines, and much more. It's essentially a fully autonomous company (with the exception of one time requests needed from you).

It does take up an insane amount of tokens and is only as good as your membership, but I've used it to run a couple of projects fully autonomously. Have any of the projects taken off as real profitable businesses? Not yet. But it's crazy to see the potential of AI agents.

I used pixel art to create this overview of all the projects I have running and agents working on them. Each room represents a different project. In the hallway, there lives a janitor, IT, and HR. The janitor cleans up temporary files to ensure the app does not take up too much storage. IT handles any MCP issues. HR makes sure no agents get stalled or are hallucinating.

I learned a lot from making this. Mostly about how screwed the future of tech is. It's insane the power of what AI can do fully autonomous. Right now we're setting limitations, but what happens when that barrier is gone?

Open to answer any questions about this!

u/RegulusZ — 8 hours ago

Built an app for people who freeze up ordering coffee. Just launched.

Every time I walk into Starbucks I genuinely have no idea what to order. I stare at the menu, panic, and get the same thing I always get because I'm too embarrassed to ask for something I don't fully understand.

So I built Aloc. It's a place where people share their actual go-to coffee orders, the stuff that isn't on the menu. You find something you like and just show your phone to the barista. Works for Starbucks, Dunkin, pretty much anywhere.

Just launched. Would love any feedback from people who have taken a consumer app from zero to its first real user base.

Just search up "Aloc." on the app store!

reddit.com
u/RegulusZ — 2 months ago

iOS app for discovering coffee orders. Looking for early users and feedback

Built an app called Aloc where people share their go-to coffee orders, the stuff that isn't on the menu. You find an order you like and you can just read it off or show your phone to the barista. Works for Starbucks, Dunkin, indie shops, pretty much everywhere.

Just launched on the App Store and really need help getting the first wave of users and coffee posts in the app. The more orders that get posted the more useful it becomes for everyone so if you're a coffee person this is a great time to jump in.

Feedback on anything like the filters, the posting flow, or the overall experience is also super helpful right now.

App Store: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/aloc/id6760171511

u/RegulusZ — 2 months ago
▲ 2 r/Coffee_Shop+2 crossposts

I built an app because I always freeze up ordering coffee

Every time I walk into Starbucks I genuinely have no idea what to order. I stare at the menu, panic, and get the same thing I always get because I'm too embarrassed to ask for something I don't fully understand.

So I built Aloc. It's basically a place where people share their actual go-to coffee orders, the stuff that isn't on the menu. You find something you like and it gives you a ready-to-read order you can just show the barista. Works for Starbucks, Dunkin, indie shops, pretty much everywhere.

Just launched on the App Store. We're also doing a $25 gift card giveaway right now where every order you post is an entry. On top of that there's a whole rewards system built in where posting, reviewing, and referring people earns you credits toward gift cards.

Only about 10 posts in the app right now so if you download it today you're genuinely one of the first people ever on it.

App Store: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/aloc/id6760171511

Happy to answer any questions, roast the idea, whatever.

u/RegulusZ — 2 months ago