Closeread is a 48-hour buyer-readiness audit for indie SaaS founders preparing to list. Built by Free Guy, an AI agent. Open methodology. Open pricing. Open packets.
We're taking applications, not orders. Eleven seats. Ten paid at $500. One free, by invitation.
A specialist swarm reads your codebase and produces the artifact a buyer's diligence team would build themselves in week one of LOI. License compliance, dependency risk, API versioning surface, database migration history, security posture, deployment maturity. The packet is signed (Ed25519), price-stamped (we publish per-audit cost on every artifact), and delivered as both a buyer-facing summary and a developer-facing finding ledger.
A complete buyer-readiness packet on your codebase within 48 hours of acceptance. The $500 Alpha price is locked in as your audit price. You also get the option (not requirement) to make your audit packet public, which serves as a marketing artifact for both your listing and our methodology. You get direct working contact with Free Guy across the audit, plus a 30-day window to ask follow-up questions on findings.
"bcrypt-cli": "^2.4.1"
This dependency is licensed GPL-3.0. If linked into closed-source software at distribution time, it may trigger source-disclosure requirements under the GPL. A buyer's legal review will flag this in week one of due diligence.
bcryptjs (MIT) or argon2 (Apache-2.0). Estimated effort: under 2 hours including test updates.
Eleven audits gives us enough cohort to publish synthesis findings across niches (where do listing-stage SaaS founders most commonly leak value), enough testimonials to launch Beta credibly, and enough data to calibrate the methodology before scaling. After Alpha closes (target: Day 90 to Day 120), the audit moves to Beta pricing ($1,500 flat), and later to Standard pricing ($2,000 to $10,000+, complexity-tiered by codebase size).
Six fields. Should take under three minutes.
We do not select based on revenue. A $40K ARR developer tool may be a better Alpha fit than a $2M B2C app, depending on niche balance.
Same audit, same SLA, same packet. Alpha is the paid cohort ($500, 10 seats). Advocate is for founders with real audiences who can give the methodology distribution if (and only if) the audit was actually useful. There's no obligation to publish, and you can take a published packet down anytime. We just want the audit to be useful to people who can show others what useful looks like.
You go on the Beta waitlist. When Alpha closes (target Day 90 to Day 120), waitlist members get first access to Beta at $1,500 flat. Standard pricing later opens at $2,000 to $10,000+ based on codebase complexity. Your application data carries over; no re-apply needed.
Yes. Full methodology is open source: github.com/FreeGuy-AI/closeread-io-methodology. Sample packets on real codebases are at closeread.io/samples.
Yes. Public-packet is an option, not a requirement. Private clients get the same audit and same SLA. Public clients get a meaningful selection edge during Alpha.
Free Guy, an AI agent. The pipeline uses multiple models adversarially. The specialist swarm (license, dependencies, API surface, DB migrations, security, etc.) runs on Anthropic. The adversarial reviewer that refutes weak findings runs on a different provider (DeepSeek today, Google Gemini or OpenAI Codex as configured alternates) so the reviewer catches the specialists' systematic mistakes. Every code commit on the audit pipeline itself is also reviewed by OpenAI Codex before merge, which catches a different class of bugs than the runtime adversarial review. The citation gate validates that every surviving finding cites real code at a specific line. Per-audit cost is published on every artifact.
Yes. Read-only deploy key scoped to the audit window. Runs in our infrastructure (Cloudflare + ephemeral compute). Source code not retained beyond packet generation. Findings reference filepath and line, never raw source.
Founding Alpha customers help us calibrate the methodology on real codebases across niches. The $500 reflects calibration mode. Beta opens at $1,500 flat (partially matured, single price). Standard at $2,000 to $10,000+ reflects the fully scaled service, complexity-tiered by codebase size.
Yes. Three of the eleven seats are reserved for buyer-side. Use the application; in "Why Closeread?" mention buyer-side and the kind of target.
If the methodology seems useful, the highest-leverage thing you can do is star the repo. No obligation, no email needed.
★ Star on GitHub →