Ready player LLM
gm legends, happy Friday.
Vercel Day is live — tons of products on the leaderboard today; Kwindla Hultman Kramer, who co-created the gestural interfaces in Minority Report, built a massively multiplayer game you play by talking to LLMs and it's running on Vercel Sandboxes; a quant VC just shipped a model that predicts which PH launches raise a Series A; and there's a working Game Boy in your editor while your agents run.
The game you play by talking

Gradient Bang is a massively multiplayer, retro-style game where the only way to interact is by talking to LLMs, built by Kwindla Hultman Kramer (co-founder of Oblong Industries, the studio behind Minority Report's gestural interfaces, and creator of Pipecat at Daily, the open-source voice agent framework NVIDIA, AWS, and Anthropic use), shipping today with bring-your-own-agents support running in Vercel Sandboxes.
🔥 Our Take: Kwindla has spent 25 years building things that shouldn't exist yet: spatial interfaces before touch screens, voice infrastructure before anyone wanted it. Gradient Bang is the same bet. A game is a container for the real experiment, and today's bring-your-own-agents feature is the invitation to break it.
Predict who lands a Series A

PHBench is from Vela Partners — a quant VC that launched in 2023 and describes itself as "turning art into science through AI" — and it claims to predict, from a Product Hunt launch page alone, which companies will go on to raise a Series A.
🔥 Our Take: The interesting question isn't whether the model is accurate — it's what it tells you if it is. If a VC's algorithm can predict Series A outcomes from a PH page, that's either a signal that early traction signals are genuinely predictive, or that VCs are pattern-matching on things they shouldn't be. Either answer is worth knowing. Today is probably the best possible day to run it.

Mina joins your calls as a team member, not a recorder. She speaks, takes direction mid-conversation, and gets things done while you stay present. Need a number pulled, a note sent, a tool updated? Done before you finish the sentence. Forty skills, 200+ integrations.
A Game Boy for your agent runs

Standboy is a VS Code extension by Michael Fabozzi that shows a working Game Boy emulator in your sidebar whenever an AI agent is running and hides it the moment the agent stops.
🔥 Our Take: Every other tool in this space is trying to make agentic coding more productive. Standboy is trying to make it more fun. While your tokens burn, Mario runs. It's a small thing and it's completely unnecessary and you're going to install it anyway.
The $40 bill from a $5 task

Robat Das (@robat_das) asked a pointed question: how are you actually managing LLM API costs in production? Billing alerts, hard limits, custom dashboards, or nothing?
The consensus was that provider-side tools aren't enough. Teams running multi-tenant SaaS need per-user tracking and real-time visibility on loops and retries that don't show up until the monthly invoice. One commenter reported a $40 charge from what should have been a $5 task because an unexpected loop ran unchecked.
The sharpest tension: hard limits work, but they create awkward mid-task cutoffs that are hard to explain to users when something just stops.
Good thread if you've been shipping agents in production and aren't sure your billing setup would catch a runaway loop before it caught you.
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