Fognitix
Summary
Browser automation falls apart the moment a site renders dynamically, a layout breaks, or a CAPTCHA interrupts the flow — most scripted tools stop dead and wait for a human. Fognitix is a desktop browser agent that reads both the DOM and rendered pixels, replans on the fly, and keeps moving.
You type a goal; Fognitix works through a Read-Decide-Act-Verify loop, clicking and typing inside your own local browser sessions until the task is done. The vendor states a 99.2% task completion rate against broken layouts and dynamic SPAs, with up to five sessions running in parallel — so you can compare flight prices while scraping documentation at the same time. Completed goals can be saved as reusable workflows and triggered from the CLI. The ceiling appears when tasks require decisions you haven't sanctioned in advance: Fognitix acts autonomously, so sensitive form submissions or purchases go through without a confirmation step unless you build that gate yourself. Teams that need audit trails or approval checkpoints before consequential actions ship will find the architecture works against them.
Bottom line: Pick this for repetitive research, booking, and data-gathering tasks where speed matters and mistakes are recoverable — not for workflows where an autonomous wrong click costs money or triggers an irreversible action.
Pricing Plans
SubscriptionLast verified 2 weeks ago- Price
- $20/mo
- Free Tier
- 25 agent tasks / month, Up to 26 steps per task, Always-on AI chat panel, Page summaries & answers
Free
Kick the tires.
- 25 agent tasks / month
- Up to 26 steps per task
- Always-on AI chat panel
- Page summaries & answers
Pro
For everyday autopilot.
- Unlimited agent tasks
- Run 5 agents in parallel
- Self-healing vision fallback
- Customizable widget home
- Priority model access
Max
Maximum horsepower.
- Everything in Pro
- Highest parallel limits
- Shareable saved workflows
- Audit log of every action
- Priority support
View full pricing on fognitix.com →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Up to five parallel browser sessions per goal, so multi-source research tasks that would take sequential minutes resolve in a fraction of the time — without stitching together results manually.
- Vision-native interaction reads both DOM structure and rendered pixels together, so dynamic SPAs and broken layouts don't halt execution the way CSS-selector-dependent scripts do.
- All sessions run sandboxed on your own machine with no data leaving the device, which means you can feed it sessions carrying real credentials without routing sensitive cookies through a third-party cloud.
- Completed goals save as reusable workflows triggerable from the CLI, so a one-off research task becomes a scheduled pipeline without rewriting anything.
- Self-healing loop replans when a step fails rather than throwing an error, which means overnight or unattended runs don't silently stall on the first unexpected page state.
Cons
Sign in to edit- There is no built-in approval step before the agent acts. On tasks involving purchases, reservations, or outbound messages, Fognitix will execute based on its own confidence score — teams that need to review before anything ships must constrain goal scope manually, and that constraint breaks down as tasks get more complex.
- No API is listed in the vendor docs, which means Fognitix cannot be triggered or monitored from an external system. Teams that need browser automation as one step inside a larger pipeline — not a standalone tool — will hit this wall immediately and move to a competitor with a callable interface.
- The parallel session cap is five. Workflows that require breadth beyond five simultaneous sources — large-scale competitive monitoring, bulk data gathering across dozens of pages — require either sequential batching or a different architecture entirely.
- No self-hosted deployment option exists, so teams with strict IT policies around software installation on managed machines, or those in regulated environments requiring approved tooling, have no compliant path to use Fognitix.
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About
- Platforms
- Desktop
- API Available
- No
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-29T04:30:28.108Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Everyday autopilot browsing tasks
- Users needing parallel agent runs
- Those requiring self-healing automation features
What it does well
- Autonomous web navigation and form filling
- Parallel task execution across sessions
- Research and data gathering with page summaries
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Fognitix free?
- Fognitix has a permanent free tier alongside paid upgrades (paid plans from $20/mo). You can keep using a baseline version indefinitely without paying.
- Is Fognitix open source?
- No — Fognitix is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- What platforms does Fognitix support?
- Fognitix is available on: Desktop.
Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community
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Curated lists that include this category
Fognitix is a desktop browser agent that takes a natural-language goal and drives itself through a web session: reading page state, deciding the next action, executing it, verifying the result, and repeating until the task completes. The core loop — Read, Decide, Act, Verify, Repeat — runs entirely on your machine, inside your own browser sessions, so cookies and credentials never leave the device. Completed task sequences can be saved as workflows and re-triggered on a schedule or via CLI.
The standout capability is parallelism. The vendor describes splitting a single goal into up to five concurrent sessions that run simultaneously and merge results into one synthesized answer. That means a task like ‘compare three hotel rates and find the cheapest flight on the same dates’ resolves in roughly the time of one session rather than five sequential ones — a structural advantage over any tool that queues tasks serially.
Fognitix fits teams automating repetitive, recoverable web tasks: booking, grocery reorders, competitor price monitoring, multi-page research synthesis. It breaks down when the workflow demands a human sign-off before a consequential action. The agent acts on its own judgment; there is no built-in approval gate described in the vendor docs. Teams running automation against accounts with real financial exposure — purchases, form submissions, outbound messages — will need to either scope goals carefully or accept that a misread page state can produce an unintended action. There is also no self-hosted option and no API listed, which rules it out for teams that need to trigger Fognitix from an external orchestration layer or embed it in a broader pipeline.
