One model agrees with you. Five argue.
Ask a single AI “is my idea good?” and you mostly get flattery. One model has one set of training data, one personality, one set of blind spots — and a strong tendency to tell you what you want to hear. That feels great and teaches you nothing.
Boss.cc takes the opposite approach. We send your idea to five different AI models from four different labs — Meta, Qwen, NVIDIA, and Mistral — and give each one a different job. They don't see each other's answers, so they can't fall into groupthink. Then a sixth model reads all five verdicts and writes a single synthesis: GO, PIVOT, or NO-GO.
The five-judge panel
Viability
Can this actually be built — with what team, in what time, on what budget?
Market
How big is the audience, and how much will they really pay?
Competition
Who already serves this need, and where is the defensible edge?
Monetization
Pricing, channels, unit economics. No hand-waving.
Risk (Devil's Advocate)
What kills this in 6–12 months. Specific failure modes, not vibes.
Why this is honest
Each agent runs on a different model family — different training data, different fine-tuning, different weaknesses. When all five converge, that's signal. When they split, the disagreement itself tells you where the real risk lives. The Risk agent is explicitly told to be a devil's advocate, so at least one voice is always trying to kill your idea — the way a good investor or co-founder would.
Before any idea reaches the panel, a local model runs a TRIZ-based pre-filter to catch ideas that are too vague or derivative to evaluate. The panel's time is spent on real ideas, not noise.
Who built it
Boss.cc is built by InnovaTek Solutions. It's free to use, requires no signup, and returns a verdict in roughly ten seconds. Public verdicts are shareable as a link and collected in the public idea catalog.