Compare/Build Check vs Mike

AI tool comparison

Build Check vs Mike

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

B

Productivity

Build Check

AI validates your app idea before you waste months building it

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Build Check (for Outsiders) is an AI-powered tool that evaluates whether your app or startup idea is worth pursuing before you invest significant development time and money. It debuted at #2 on Product Hunt today with 314 votes, behind only Claude Opus 4.7. The tool runs your concept through a structured analysis: market sizing, competitor mapping, differentiation potential, and a "Build vs. Buy" scorecard. It draws on real-time data about app stores, existing tools, and venture funding patterns to surface whether your idea is genuinely novel or a well-funded incumbent's roadmap item. The "for Outsiders" framing is deliberate — it's designed for domain experts who want to build software but lack a technical co-founder or product validation instincts. In the "too many AI wrappers" era, Build Check is trying to be a useful filter upstream of the build process itself. The killer feature is the Competitive Blindspot report: it specifically flags competitors that are two degrees removed from the obvious ones — the kind of thing an outsider building their first app would never think to check.

M

Productivity

Mike

Open-source legal AI that reads docs, cites verbatim, and drafts contracts

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Mike is an open-source legal AI platform built as a direct alternative to Harvey and Legora — without the vendor lock-in or per-seat pricing. It connects to Claude or Gemini via your own API keys and gives solo practitioners and small firms the same document review, contract drafting, and workflow automation capabilities that enterprise legal tools charge thousands for. The platform organizes work into matter-scoped Projects — persistent workspaces where documents stay contextually linked across sessions. Its Tabular Review feature extracts structured data from multiple documents into a spreadsheet view, with every cell backed by a verbatim citation you can click to verify. Workflows layer on top for repeatable tasks like credit agreement summaries and change-of-control reviews. Mike is built by Will Chen and is self-hostable or available as a cloud product. The fundamental pricing model is radical: you pay only your Claude or Gemini API costs. No license fees, no per-seat pricing. For small firms doing high-volume document review, the economics are dramatically better than any SaaS alternative at $500–$2,000/user/month.

Decision
Build Check
Mike
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free / $29/mo
Free (pay only your own API costs) / Self-hosted
Best for
AI validates your app idea before you waste months building it
Open-source legal AI that reads docs, cites verbatim, and drafts contracts
Category
Productivity
Productivity

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

I've wasted six months on two ideas that already existed in slightly different forms. A tool that does this research for me before I spin up a repo is genuinely valuable. The competitive blindspot analysis is the standout feature — it catches the 'obvious in retrospect' competitors I always miss.

80/100 · ship

Self-hosted legal AI that runs on your own Claude or Gemini API key is genuinely clever — the pricing model alone makes this worth exploring. The codebase is clean and the tabular citation view is the kind of UX detail that shows someone actually thought about the legal workflow. Deploy this for any firm that's been priced out of Harvey.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

The market data quality will determine whether this is useful or just expensive hallucination. If it's pulling from stale datasets or misidentifying competitors, overconfident founders will use it to confirm their biases rather than challenge them. The 'outsider' framing also worries me — the people who most need deep market validation are least equipped to critique the AI's output.

45/100 · skip

Solo dev projects in legal tech carry serious liability risk — if the model hallucinates a clause or misses a citation, the consequences aren't a bad tweet, they're malpractice exposure. Until this has real-world usage data from actual attorneys and independent security audits, enterprise law firms should stay cautious. Also, Claude Sonnet or Gemini Flash are not the same as GPT-5.5 fine-tuned on case law.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

We're in an era where anyone can build software but differentiation is getting harder to achieve. Tools that compress the validation loop from months to hours could significantly accelerate the 'good ideas getting built' rate while filtering out redundant clones. This is a necessary layer in the AI-assisted building stack.

80/100 · ship

Open-source legal AI is the first credible wedge against the Harvey monopoly on AI-native law. When every solo practitioner and boutique firm can deploy their own matter-scoped AI workspace for free, the power dynamic in legal tech shifts permanently. Mike is the kind of project that looks small today and reshapes an industry in five years.

Creator
80/100 · ship

As a non-technical creator who has ideas constantly, the gap between 'is this a real opportunity' and 'let me find a developer' has always been a painful black box. Build Check turns that into a structured report I can actually act on or share with collaborators. The UI is clean and the report format is easy to read.

80/100 · ship

The tabular review UI is genuinely beautiful for a developer-built open source project — it solves the 'show your work' problem that makes lawyers distrust AI outputs. If the UX holds up under real document loads, this is the design template for AI tools in trust-sensitive industries.

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