Skip to main content
AIDiveForge AIDiveForge
Visit SquidHub

Share This Tool

Compare This Tool
📋 Embed this tool on your site

Copy this code to embed a compact tool card:

SquidHub

FreemiumAgentic

Summary

When your team is three agents deep into a planning session, the context lives in someone's browser tab — and the moment they close it, everyone else is working blind. SquidHub is built around the problem of shared AI context: a multiplayer workspace where humans and AI agents operate on the same canvas, in the same session, at the same time.

The vendor describes SquidHub as 'multiplayer mode for humans and AI,' with agents — called squids — that autonomously search the web, read tools, write memos, generate images, and deliver artifacts in loops. The BYOK model flexibility means your team isn't locked to a single provider when costs shift or a project needs a different capability. Real-time artifact sharing is the core architectural bet: outputs land in a shared space rather than in individual chat threads that fragment as the team grows. The scraped page content is minimal, so specific performance ceilings, integration depth, and agent coordination limits are not confirmable from the vendor page alone.

Bottom line: SquidHub works when your bottleneck is fragmented AI context across a collaborating team — it breaks when you need a documented, auditable API surface or self-hosted deployment that keeps your data off third-party infrastructure.

Pricing Plans

Flat RateLast verified 2 weeks ago
Price
$29/mo
Free Tier
250 ink/month, up to 10 members, 10 rooms, 5 squids

Free

Free

For trying it out

  • 250 ink/month
  • Up to 10 members
  • 10 rooms, 5 squids
  • Bring your own keys u2014 0 ink

Pro

$59per month

For heavy, scaling use

  • 5,000 ink/month
  • Up to 50 members
  • 500 rooms, 100 squids
  • Everything in Team

Enterprise

Custom

Enterprise plan

  • SSO
  • SCIM
  • Custom limits
  • Security review with our team

View full pricing on squidhub.ai →

Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.

Community Performance Report Card

No community ratings yet. Be the first to rate this tool!

Best For: Teams needing shared AI context, Users wanting BYOK model flexibility, Workflows requiring real-time artifact sharing, Projects with multiple AI agents

Community Benchmarks Community

No community benchmarks yet. Be the first to share a real-world data point.

  • Agents autonomously loop through web search, tool reading, memo writing, and image generation, so your team gets a finished artifact rather than a prompt-and-paste cycle.
  • Real-time artifact sharing on a shared canvas means the whole team sees what the agent produced as it produces it — no one is working from a stale screenshot in Slack.
  • BYOK model flexibility lets teams swap the underlying model provider without rebuilding the workflow, so a spike in API costs or a capability gap doesn't strand a project mid-sprint.
  • Multiplayer session design keeps AI context alive across the team, so the strategic thread doesn't die when the person who started the session closes their laptop.
  • Freemium entry point means a team can validate whether shared AI context solves their coordination problem before committing to a paid tier.
  • No API is available, so any team that needs agent outputs to feed a downstream system — a CRM update, a data pipeline, a CI trigger — has to extract artifacts manually; at production scale, that manual step becomes the bottleneck the tool was supposed to eliminate.
  • No self-hosted option exists, which means teams under HIPAA, SOC 2, or EU data residency requirements cannot use SquidHub for any data that must stay on controlled infrastructure — those teams will move to a self-hostable alternative before the pilot ends.
  • The vendor page renders no substantive content without JavaScript and exposes no technical documentation in the scraped output, so the actual agent coordination model, context window limits, and concurrency ceilings are unverifiable — teams evaluating this for high-stakes production workflows are flying without specs.

Community Reviews

No reviews yet. Be the first to share your experience.

About

Platforms
Web
API Available
No
Self-Hosted
No
Last Updated
2026-06-27T06:17:08.381Z

Best For

Who it's for

  • Teams needing shared AI context
  • Users wanting BYOK model flexibility
  • Workflows requiring real-time artifact sharing
  • Projects with multiple AI agents

What it does well

  • Team strategy and launch planning
  • Growth and investor positioning
  • Engineering documentation and research
  • Product and sales collaboration

Integrations

GitHubLinearJiraNotionStripeSentryShopifyMCP servers; GmailSlackGoogle Drive coming soon

Discussion Community

No discussion yet. Sign in to start the conversation.

Spotted incorrect or missing data? Join our community of contributors.

Sign Up to Contribute

Community Notes & Tips Community

Be the first to contribute. General notes, observations, gotchas, and tips from people who use this tool day-to-day.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is SquidHub free?
SquidHub has a permanent free tier alongside paid upgrades (paid plans from $29/mo). You can keep using a baseline version indefinitely without paying.
Is SquidHub open source?
No — SquidHub is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
What platforms does SquidHub support?
SquidHub is available on: Web.

Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community

Be the first to contribute. Concrete time/cost savings, with context. e.g. "Cut my code review backlog from 4h to 45m per week."

SquidHub

SquidHub positions itself as a collaborative workspace where teams and AI agents run inside the same session. The core workflow, as described by the vendor, involves agents — squids — that autonomously loop through tasks: web search, reading tools, drafting memos, generating images, and surfacing artifacts directly to the shared canvas. Human participants and agents coexist in the session rather than handing off asynchronously, which is the architectural distinction from tools where AI runs in one window and the team communicates about it in another.

The differentiating feature the vendor leads with is multiplayer context: the AI’s working memory, the artifacts it produces, and the inputs your team provides all exist in a shared space. For use cases like launch planning, investor positioning, or cross-functional product and sales collaboration, this closes the loop between what the agent found and what the team decides to do with it. BYOK model flexibility — bring your own API key — means teams can route to different model providers depending on task type or cost, without rebuilding their workflow.

SquidHub fits teams whose core frustration is AI outputs that evaporate into individual chat histories. It is a weaker fit when your project requires a programmatic API to integrate agent outputs into downstream systems — the vendor does not list an API as available. Self-hosted deployment is also not offered, which is a hard stop for teams under data residency or compliance constraints. The agents-in-loops model is well-suited to open-ended research and planning tasks; for deterministic, auditable pipelines where every branch and output must be logged, the canvas-based approach will hit its limits.