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The flagship feature

Every prediction market tool gives you a probability. Supermission gives you the argument. The War Room is where four AI agents independently analyze a market, disagree with each other, and produce a synthesized view — complete with edge calculation, risk flags, and conviction scoring. It’s the closest thing to having a trading desk without the overhead.

The four agents

Bull

Finds every reason the market should be higher. Optimistic framing. Looks for catalysts, positive sentiment shifts, underpriced probabilities.

Bear

The counterweight. Finds every reason it could go wrong. Risk factors, negative data, overconfidence in consensus.

Contrarian

Asks “what if everyone is wrong?” Looks for crowded trades, false consensus, and scenarios the market isn’t pricing.

Quant

Pure data. Historical base rates, volume patterns, orderbook dynamics, time-to-resolution analysis. No narratives, just numbers.

How to access it

Open any market’s detail page and tap the AI tab. The War Room loads with the latest analysis for that market.

What you see

The big number at the top. This is the divergence between the AI’s synthesized probability and the current market price. A 15% edge means the AI thinks the market is mispriced by 15 cents. Bigger edge = bigger potential opportunity (and bigger potential for the AI to be wrong).
How much the four agents agree. High conviction = agents largely aligned. Low conviction = significant debate. The meter visualizes this as a spectrum from contested to unanimous.
One line. The single biggest risk to the AI’s thesis. If you read nothing else, read this. It’s the bear case distilled into a sentence.
Historical hit rate for signals on similar markets. Past performance isn’t predictive, but calibration matters. If the AI says 80% confidence and it’s been right 78% of the time at that level — that’s well-calibrated.

Why this matters

Every competitor shows you a price. Some show you a chart. None show you the reasoning. The War Room makes the AI’s thinking transparent. You’re not trusting a black box — you’re evaluating arguments from four distinct perspectives and deciding for yourself. That’s the difference between following a signal and understanding a trade.
The Contrarian agent is the most underrated. When it agrees with Bull or Bear, pay attention — it means even the “what if everyone is wrong” perspective couldn’t find a counterargument.