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Yoshi — anonymous founder who has run infra nodes and watched data centers eat the margin. MeterCall is the bet on the next platform shift: pay-per-call APIs as the pricing rail under the agent economy. Yoshi writes the code, answers the support email, and ships the launch. Contact via press@metercall.ai.
MeterCall opens general availability April 21, 2026, exposing 4,854+ modular SaaS-replacement endpoints — covering CRM, accounting, business intelligence, market data, document automation, payroll, and vertical operations software — behind a single API key with per-call pricing. The platform natively supports x402 HTTP payment headers, enabling AI agents to purchase and settle API calls directly in USDC on the Base network without human involvement. First 100 signups receive $50 in API credit, no card required. Zero customers and zero revenue on launch morning — we launch with honest receipts, not fabricated case studies.
Built on top of a schema-first adapter framework and a parallel code-generation pipeline running Claude Code across isolated worktrees, MeterCall’s module catalog expanded from roughly 400 to 4,854+ in a compressed build sprint. Each adapter is gated by automated round-trip tests against a typed OpenAPI schema; roughly 6% of generated adapters are held in a reject queue for human review before shipping. The company says the pipeline will scale to 10,000 modules by end of quarter.
MeterCall publishes its target unit economics in public: per-call pricing aims to replace underused SaaS seat licenses across categories including CRM, BI, and document signing, with modeled annualized savings in the tens to low hundreds of thousands of dollars per customer at scale. These are targets drawn from list-price comparison on the public catalog — not measured customer results. MeterCall has zero paying customers and zero revenue on launch eve. Founder (anonymous, “Yoshi”) said the company is deliberately operating without a traditional sales motion: “We sell API calls. If your code can curl, you are our distribution.” MeterCall is self-funded to date and has no plans to announce outside investment on launch.
“Subscription pricing assumes a human logs in. Agents don’t log in. They fire API calls. If you can’t bill per call, the agent economy skips you.”
“We’re not selling software. We’re metering other people’s software, for the agents and backends building on top. Small toll, big volume.”
“A single agent generating 4,854 modules is a bad movie. Fourteen agents generating 350 each is a weekend.”
Same-day response during business hours. Call requests via email, please.
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MeterCall.ai is the metering layer of the new internet. 4,854+ SaaS replacements built and ready to meter, callable per-request with no subscription. Builders use MeterCall to ship SaaS replacements at a fraction of incumbent list pricing, or to wire agents into the full stack of third-party software. Led by an anonymous founder (“Yoshi”) who has run nodes and lost to data centers, MeterCall treats software distribution like electricity: pay for what you use, build on top, keep the margin. MeterCall launches April 21, 2026 with zero paying customers yet. The $100K community-voted builder contest runs through May 11, 2026, with winners announced May 14.
Yoshi is the founder of MeterCall.ai, operating anonymously by preference. Yoshi has a background running infra nodes and has watched data centers consume the margin from independent operators every cycle. MeterCall is the bet that pay-per-call distribution is the next platform seam. Yoshi operates in builder mode — shipping nights and weekends, running multi-agent swarms in parallel, and treating momentum as the primary product metric. For interview requests, email press@metercall.ai. No photo; identity verification available under NDA for serious press.