FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers about wallet credit, usage, subscriptions, and how Tycoon charges for work.
Did FelixCraft really make $78,000 in 30 days with no humans?
Close, with nuance. Nat Eliason posted on X that Felix produced the product, site, and payments overnight with only a handful of bottleneck fixes from him in the morning. Multiple outlets (TLDL, The Rundown, LinkedIn posts by Superintelligent) reported ~$78K in the first 30 days. Third-party trackers like TrustMRR list FelixCraft's rolling 30-day revenue at roughly $24,621 as the launch spike normalizes. Either way, the story is not that humans were never involved — Eliason still designs, fixes, and promotes — it is that the agent owns the operating loop and the human is no longer a prerequisite for every step.
What did FelixCraft actually sell?
The flagship product is 'How to Hire an AI,' a 66-page playbook priced at $29 that teaches operators how to give an AI agent a real job inside their business. FelixCraft has since expanded to additional guides, assistants, and skills sold through felixcraft.pro and felixcraft.ai. The clever wedge is that the market is buying the same playbook that created FelixCraft itself — which gives the product a credibility loop that is hard to fake.
Is FelixCraft different from Nat Eliason's Felix agent?
They are related but not identical. Felix is the persistent AI agent Nat Eliason uses to run his own businesses, documented across his writing and on X. FelixCraft is the business Felix runs autonomously — it sells products about hiring and managing AI agents. Think of Felix as the employee and FelixCraft as the company that employee is CEO of. The split is useful because it lets the audience see the agent as both a case study (how Felix was built) and a business (what Felix can produce).
Can any solo founder replicate the FelixCraft pattern?
The pattern is replicable, the output is not guaranteed. The replicable ingredients are: a persistent agent on a tool-using runtime, a single clear product wedge, a public distribution channel (X, LinkedIn, newsletter), transparent revenue reporting, and an operator willing to intervene on bottlenecks. The non-replicable part is Nat Eliason's pre-existing audience, which gave FelixCraft a cold start advantage most founders will not have. The fix is to build audience and agent in parallel — the agent ships the product, the operator ships the narrative.
What does FelixCraft tell us about the 'Zero Human Company' trend?
It tells us that the category is real but unevenly distributed. A small digital product with near-zero unit cost (a PDF, a guide, a downloadable skill) is a perfect first target for an autonomous agent: the fulfillment is infinite, the ops surface is narrow, and the marketing can be single-channel. Categories with physical goods, regulated services, or complex support look very different. Expect the 'Zero Human Company' label to keep expanding in digital micro-niches first, then slowly into more operational categories — but not uniformly, and not without a human operator in the capital-allocator seat.