Hey everyone!
We re excited to share that Agentplace 2.0 launches tomorrow, November 20!
Agentplace 2.0, a platform for building AI-native websites. You can build everything from AI product advisors and consultant sites to AI receptionists, brand agents, and personal AI replicas.
You ll be able to test the live demo for free, and if you d like to dive deeper and explore the full platform, you ll also get access to a promo code with 100 credits to try Agentplace more extensively.
Agentplace
We started as a builder for AI websites. Good product. But the more we talked to users, the more we realized they didn't want better websites, they wanted better work. So we went bigger.
Agentplace lets you create specialized AI agents for real tasks and workflows. Think AI teammates that actually help you get things done. Generative UI, voice, browser memory, agents that adapt to each user over time. A unified workspace where you can switch between agents and get real work done.
And we built around one core insight: the trick isn’t “build the perfect agent.” It’s to ship, use, fix, and repeat fast.
Work mode gets your agent running. Edit mode brings you back the moment something breaks or a better model drops. Republish in minutes.
We're genuinely excited to hear what works, what breaks, and what we should build next. Every comment here shapes the product.
Looking ahead, we’re doubling down on this idea of AI teammates.
We think the future isn’t just better agents, but a shared workspace where agents and people work together.
Agents will handle more work end-to-end, talk to each other, and run tasks autonomously. People stay in the loop, see what’s happening, and step in where judgment matters.
Over time, this becomes a new kind of work environment, where humans focus on decisions, and agents handle execution. That’s the direction we’re building toward.
What's the first agent you'd build?
FuseBase
@vlad_yanch I'm testing brief builder agent now, looks like it can save much time in client briefing, fits great in my selling process
@vlad_yanch Nice direction! I’d probably start with something simple, an agent that handles routine stuff like collecting info, summarizing it, and organizing tasks (basically saving me from constant context switching)
FuseBase
Congrats with a new launch @polina_semina @vlad_yanch
This is cool bc it feels closer to how adoption actually works inside companies. Does one person usually own an agent or can a few people manage it together? That part matters a lot for teams.
Agentplace
@polina_semina @vlad_yanch @kate_ramakaieva
No team management yet, one person owns each agent right now. We do have remix concept though, which helps with this. Someone builds an agent, publishes it, turns on "allow remix". They share a link, anyone who opens it gets their own copy of agent. They change whatever they want from there. It's not shared ownership but if someone on your team figures out a good workflow. You can also publish an agent with restricted access, so only specific people or your company's email domain can use it. That way you share the agent itself, not just the template.
Scade.pro
I keep seeing agent products but most of them still feel kinda abstract.
This one feels more grounded tho
Is there still a learning curve for non technical people, or is setup actually lightweight?
Agentplace
@maria_anosova We spent a lot of time trying not to invent new stuff to learn. There are a few things you'll need to pick up but they're the same in any agent tool, like skills (what your agent can do) and MCP (what agent can do and how it connects to other services ). After that you're mostly just telling it what you want in plain words.
You build it, hit publish, pick who can see it, and it's live on its own URL, so I would say it's pretty lightweight
Congrats on the launch! 🚀
how do you see your main audience at this stage? more developers building custom workflows, or non-technical users exploring agents for the first time?
@julia_zakharova2 Thanks! Honestly, both. Non-technical users can build fully functional agents just through chat, no code required. But developers will find a lot to love here too: full code access, custom integrations and MCP tools support. It just makes the whole process way faster. What used to take days now takes minutes.
@kaysinb Got it, makes sense. Who’s actually using it more so far, devs or non-technical users?
@julia_zakharova2 So far mostly non-technical users, but ones with some experience using agents in tools like Claude Code, so they already get the general concepts.
Jinna.ai
Congrats on the launch! Agents instruct agents… Does you tool work over a codebase to tailor an agent for it? Asking because generic agent instructions is something I believe Claude itself can generate, wondering how it works in your product
@nikitaeverywhere Great question! Yes, our Builder agent works directly with the agent's codebase. It reads files, edits code, runs commands, checks logs, even takes screenshots of the running preview to verify things look right. So it's not just generating a prompt and hoping for the best. It's iteratively building and refining a full working app with UI, tools, server logic, the whole thing. Think of it more like an AI developer pair-programming your agent into existence, not a prompt generator.
Agentplace
Hey! Polina here, I run operations at Agentplace.
I’ve been actively using our agents for day-to-day tasks, and it’s been a huge help with routine work.
Would love to hear your feedback if you get a chance to try it!
FinCheck by Trezy
Congrats on the launch! Pivoting away from something that was already working takes guts! respect for that.
Curious: what's the wildest agent someone's built since you made the shift?