
Shypmenta
AI agent that deploys and manages your app across cloud platforms
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About Shypmenta
Shypmenta is an AI deployment agent that takes an app you've already built and gets it running in production on cloud infrastructure, without you needing a DevOps engineer on the team. The site frames it bluntly, describing itself as the agent that deploys and manages your thing on different platforms autonomously. The gap it goes after is the one nearly every solo founder or tiny team hits once the code works locally, where shipping to real infrastructure suddenly demands knowledge of cloud providers, networking, scaling, and billing that nobody involved actually has. That last stretch from a working prototype to something live and reliable is where a lot of small projects stall, not because the product is wrong but because the plumbing is unfamiliar.
The agent has a name, Manus Dei, shortened to M.D., and the pitch is that its whole reason for existing is to carry your project to production. Instead of you learning a cloud console from scratch, you describe what you're deploying and the agent handles the deployment work, guiding you through the parts you don't know how to do rather than dropping a wall of documentation in front of you. The experience is framed as a single ongoing conversation rather than a dashboard full of switches and settings, so the mental model is closer to asking a knowledgeable colleague than to teaching yourself an entire platform end to end.
It's built to work across more than one cloud instead of locking you into a single provider. The site names AWS and GCP directly and refers to custom infrastructure alongside them, positioning the agent as something that can coordinate deployments across several platforms at once. That multi-platform angle is aimed at teams who don't want to commit hard to one vendor's ecosystem before they even have traction, and who'd rather keep their options open while they figure out what they're building. It also means the same agent stays the one interface you deal with even when the underlying infrastructure spans more than one provider.
A recurring theme across the page is money. The agent is meant to plan billing with you and steer you away from the spending mistakes that catch people who set up cloud infrastructure without experience. The site leans on this hard, with customer quotes describing meaningful reductions in cloud burn after handing setup to the agent, including a claim of cutting a burn rate by roughly 40 percent and bringing down a large AWS bill. For a small team watching its runway, keeping cloud costs from quietly ballooning is often worth as much as getting the deploy done at all, and the product repeatedly ties its value to money saved rather than only time saved. Whether those numbers hold for every project is hard to judge from the outside, but the emphasis on spend is consistent throughout the site.
Shypmenta is written for founders and small teams who have something built and need it live, but who can't justify a full-time infrastructure hire. It also fits the moment when a prototype has to grow into a real production setup, with monitoring and multi-region deployment mentioned as things the agent can help stand up. If you can write the app but freeze at the deployment step, staring at options you don't understand, that's the person this is clearly written for. The through-line is that infrastructure knowledge shouldn't be the thing standing between a finished build and its first real users.
The framing sets it apart from both raw cloud consoles and traditional platform-as-a-service tools. Rather than a fixed grid of buttons, it's an agent that adapts to your project and works alongside you, closer to a partner than a control panel. It's worth being clear that the site describes guided, semi-autonomous help within one conversation rather than a fully hands-off system that ships everything with zero involvement, so you stay in the loop on the decisions that matter while the agent does the heavy lifting.
Access is priced with credits rather than a monthly subscription. Smaller packs start at four credits for four dollars and eight credits for eight dollars, though those expire within a week, while a fifteen-credit pack for fifteen dollars lasts about a month. The best value is a thirty-five-credit pack for thirty dollars, which works out cheaper per credit and, unlike the smaller bundles, never expires once bought. There's no free tier advertised, so you buy credits up front to put the agent to work, which suits occasional deployment pushes more than constant daily use. Because the largest pack's credits never expire, it also works as a way to keep the agent on hand for whenever the next deployment comes up, without paying for a subscription in the gaps.
Key Features
- Autonomous cloud deployment agent
- Support across AWS and GCP
- Billing and cost planning
- Guided production setup
- Conversation-based workflow
- Credit-based pay-as-you-go pricing
Pros & Cons
What we like
- Handles deployment for teams with no DevOps
- Works across more than one cloud provider
- Focuses on cutting cloud spend, not just shipping
- Offers a no-expiry credit pack option
Room for improvement
- Early product with a thin public site
- No free tier to try before buying credits
- Smaller credit packs expire within days
- Guided help rather than fully hands-off deployment
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Shypmenta?
Which platforms does Shypmenta deploy to?
Is Shypmenta free?
Who is Shypmenta for?
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Reviews (10)
It just works
Tried Shypmenta on a side project first, then rolled it out everywhere. Their take on billing and cost planning is genuinely good. The defaults are sensible, so I was not fighting settings on day one. Hard to imagine going back to my old setup.
Exactly what I needed
Picked Shypmenta for the price, stayed for the quality. The interface stays out of my way, which I appreciate. The core workflow is smooth once you are set up. Would sign up again without thinking twice.
Genuinely impressed
Shypmenta solves a real problem for me without making a fuss about it. It slotted into my routine without much fuss. Found it works best for standing up monitoring for a small team's app. Hard to imagine going back to my old setup.
Recommended without reservation
Came to Shypmenta after getting frustrated with what I had before. Their take on works across more than one cloud provider is genuinely good. It slotted into my routine without much fuss. Would sign up again without thinking twice.
Genuinely impressed
Shypmenta has quietly become part of my daily flow. The support across aws and gcp is more useful than I expected. It earns its place in my stack.
Recommended without reservation
Three months of Shypmenta later, here is what holds up. Where it really wins is credit-based pay-as-you-go pricing. The interface stays out of my way, which I appreciate. Mostly using it for standing up monitoring for a small team's app.
Decent with some rough edges
Started using Shypmenta casually, now it is pinned in my dock. It slotted into my routine without much fuss. The defaults are sensible, so I was not fighting settings on day one. It would be a five if not for guided help rather than fully hands-off deployment. Would sign up again without thinking twice.
Quietly excellent
Three months of Shypmenta later, here is what holds up. What stands out is how it handles billing and cost planning. What stands out is how little babysitting it needs. It fits well for cutting a cloud bill that grew out of control.
Exactly what I needed
Picked Shypmenta for the price, stayed for the quality. What stands out is how little babysitting it needs. Mostly using it for shipping a prototype to production without a devops hire.
Exactly what I needed
Found Shypmenta on a Show HN thread and I am glad I clicked. The autonomous cloud deployment agent is more useful than I expected. The output quality holds up better than I expected. Easy yes for anyone weighing the same trade offs.
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