i10X launched Supera, an AI agent that autonomously plans, researches, and executes multi-step workflows from a single prompt. The agent avoids bill shock and requires user approval before each action.
Key facts
- Supera plans, researches, executes workflows from a single prompt.
- Requires user approval before each action.
- No bill shock — cost estimates before execution.
- Competes with AutoGPT, BabyAGI, OpenAI function calling.
- Launched via tweet with no pricing or LLM disclosed.
i10X just launched Supera, an AI agent that plans, researches, and executes entire workflows from a single prompt According to @hasantoxr. The core pitch: no jumping between tools, no bill shock, and it never acts without your approval.
The approach contrasts with existing AI agents like AutoGPT or BabyAGI, which often run autonomously without cost controls or explicit user checkpoints. Supera appears to embed cost-awareness and a human-in-the-loop approval step as first-class features, not afterthoughts.
How Supera works

The agent accepts a single natural-language prompt describing a multi-step workflow — for example, researching competitors, drafting a report, and scheduling a meeting. It then breaks the task into sub-steps, selects appropriate tools (search APIs, document editors, calendars), executes each step, and pauses for user approval before proceeding to the next.
This design targets knowledge workers who currently juggle 5-10 SaaS tools daily. By consolidating tool orchestration into one agent, i10X aims to reduce context-switching overhead. The "no bill shock" claim suggests the agent surfaces cost estimates before invoking paid APIs or services.
Market positioning

Supera enters a crowded agent space. OpenAI's GPT-4 with function calling, Anthropic's Claude with tool use, and startups like Adept and Cognition Labs all offer workflow automation. But most lack transparent pricing — users discover costs only after the run completes. i10X's pre-approval model could differentiate it for budget-conscious teams.
The company did not disclose pricing, availability, or which underlying LLM powers Supera. The announcement came via a single tweet, with no blog post or documentation yet published.
What to watch
Watch for i10X to release a technical blog post or demo video showing Supera handling a real multi-step workflow — e.g., market research plus report generation. Also watch for pricing disclosure: per-task fees or subscription tiers will determine whether the "no bill shock" promise holds. If Supera supports enterprise SSO and handles compliance-sensitive data, it could compete with platforms like Salesforce's Einstein or ServiceNow's Now Assist.








