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Polymind
Prompt
·2 panelists ready·judge:Claude Haiku 4.5

See when AIs agree — and when they don't.

Ask once, hear from 2 panelists in parallel. Every run surfaces a consensus score and flags the standout dissent before the judge synthesizes the final answer.

How Polymind works

  1. Ask once

    Your question goes to every enabled panelist in parallel — up to seven frontier models answering independently, streamed live.

  2. Panelists critique each other

    With debate depth on, each model reads the others' answers and revises its own — one to three critique rounds before synthesis.

  3. The judge synthesizes

    A judge model you choose weighs the panel, writes the final answer, and reports a consensus score — with a callout when one model dissents.

Frequently asked questions

What is an LLM council?
An LLM council is a panel of large language models that answer the same question independently, critique each other's answers, and have a judge model synthesize the strongest final answer. Polymind runs your question past up to seven frontier AIs — Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok, Mistral, Qwen, and Perplexity — in parallel.
How is this different from asking ChatGPT or one chatbot?
A single model has a single set of blind spots, and you can't tell a confident answer from a correct one. A council makes disagreement visible: every Polymind run shows a consensus score, flags the panelist that dissents, and lets you read each model's answer side by side before the judge's synthesis.
Which AI models does Polymind support?
Claude (Anthropic), GPT (OpenAI), Gemini (Google), Grok (xAI), Mistral, Qwen, and Perplexity Sonar, each with a choice of model tier. Any provider on the panel can also serve as the judge that writes the final synthesis.
What are critique rounds?
After the first round of answers, panelists can read each other's responses and revise their own before the judge weighs in — one to three rounds, configurable. Watching a model change its mind under critique is often the most useful signal in the run.
Is Polymind free?
Yes — you can try it without an account, and signing in with Google unlocks the free tier: more models, a larger panel, and critique rounds, with a weekly quota. Premium removes the caps and adds every model tier, deeper debates, web search, and attachments.