FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Clear answers about wallet credit, usage, subscriptions, and how Tycoon charges for work.
What is the biggest difference between Polsia and Tycoon?
Polsia runs your company on autopilot with minimal visibility — you check outcomes, not reasoning. Tycoon gives you an AI CEO that works through chat: you set goals, approve projects, the CEO delegates, and every decision is logged. After June 2026, add this: Polsia depends on one founder not burning out; Tycoon depends on a real team shipping real infrastructure. If reliability and transparency matter, Tycoon is built for that.
Is Polsia's ARR decline a real concern?
It's a signal, not a crisis. The most likely cause is post-fundraise accounting cleanup — tightening revenue recognition after investors audit the numbers from the $30M Series A. The core subscription business (~$5M from $29-59/mo plans) appears healthy. But the decline reveals that Polsia's headline metrics were inflated, and per-company economics are eroding. For a founder choosing a platform, the question is: do you want your company's AI platform run by a single person whose numbers change under scrutiny?
How many companies does Polsia actually manage?
As of June 12, 2026, Polsia's public live dashboard shows 8,509 active companies at $10.42M ARR (down from $10.75M the week prior). The platform is run entirely by its solo founder Ben Cera. The $30M Series A at $250M valuation in May 2026 validates the commercial potential, but the declining per-company economics and single-founder dependency are the risks every prospective user should weigh.
Can I see what my AI is doing in Tycoon vs Polsia?
In Polsia, you see outcomes — shipped features, generated content, marketing results — but not the reasoning, intermediate steps, or rejected alternatives. In Tycoon, every decision is logged: what was proposed, why, who executed it, and the outcome. You can review a week of work in five minutes through your task board and chat history. Tycoon is designed for founders who want the leverage of a team AND the visibility of running their own shop.
How much does Tycoon cost compared to Polsia?
Polsia charges $29-59/mo base plus opaque usage-based add-ons (ad spend, boosts, instant packs). You have to sign up and use it to understand the real cost. Tycoon is free to start with transparent usage-based pricing: Tester (free), Serious ($20/mo), All-In ($1,499/mo). Most solo founders spend $50-500/month depending on usage. Unlike Polsia, you see exactly what you'll pay before committing.
What happens if Polsia's founder burns out or the platform goes down?
This is the question June 2026 forces every prospective Polsia user to ask. The platform has a bus factor of 1. The founder is personally fixing bugs on X while managing 8,509 companies. There is no public engineering team, no disclosed operational redundancy, and no succession plan. If you run a business that can't afford 'the founder was asleep' as an explanation for downtime, Tycoon's team-backed model is the safer bet.