A question goes up
Anyone can post one. "Will Trader Joe's open in Williamsburg by August?" "Will The Bear win an Emmy?" "Will my friend's startup still exist in a year?" Each one has a clear answer eventually.
A new prediction game for the questions you're already arguing about. Stake your reputation, not your rent. AI keeps the scoreboard. The internet finally has a record of who's actually right.
How it works
Anyone can post one. "Will Trader Joe's open in Williamsburg by August?" "Will The Bear win an Emmy?" "Will my friend's startup still exist in a year?" Each one has a clear answer eventually.
Yes or no. The more confident you are, the more points you risk. Odds shift in real time as the crowd weighs in — like a market for opinions, except the prize is being right.
When the date arrives, our AI checks every public source it can find and resolves the question. Right calls climb. Wrong ones get logged. The scoreboard updates. Forever.
On the board
Real questions resolving between now and end of year. Pick a side.
Loud, confident, wrong people sound the exact same as quiet, careful, right people. We're fixing that.
— Calld, founding principle
Why now
What used to take a human moderator now takes an agent thirty seconds and a tenth of a cent. That single change makes a million tiny questions economically possible to track.
Polymarket did billions in volume last election. Kalshi made event contracts legal. The category is wide open — and almost nobody is building for the questions that actually matter to your life.
The internet has scoreboards for everything except the one that should matter most: who actually calls things correctly. We're building it. Receipts, forever.
Questions you'll ask
No. Calld is points-only — no real money in, no real money out. Legally it's a game, the same way fantasy football and Manifold Markets are games. We have no plans to change that without a serious regulatory plan in place.
When a question's resolution date arrives, an AI agent checks public sources — news, official websites, Google Maps, Wikipedia, social media. For ambiguous outcomes, a panel of top-ranked human predictors gets the final call. We publish every resolution with sources.
None. We're free during beta because we want the best predictors in the world on the platform first. Eventually we may charge for premium features (better analytics, custom leagues, etc.) — but the core game stays free.
Sports betting is regulated separately and aggressively in the U.S. We're skipping it for V1 to keep our legal story clean. Plenty of room without it.
A small team that thinks the most valuable thing on the internet of the next decade will be a record of who is reliably right about the future. If that sounds like you, get on the list.
Get on the early access list. First 1,000 handles get permanent founder badges.