What "legit" usually asks for, and what YG3 publishes
The legitimacy question is usually a stand-in for four sub-questions: is the product real, is the process real, are the people behind it real, and can a customer leave with their assets. YG3 answers all four on the public marketing surface. The architecture is documented, the eight specialists are named with their jobs, the publish cadences and rollback rules are public, and the export model is documented asset by asset.
The architecture is public
The platform runs on three layers (model, orchestration, surface) and one shared store. The model is Elysia, self-hosted, single-tenant, with three concurrent inference slots. There is no third-party LLM call inside the stack and no per-token vendor charge passed through to clients. The architecture page on yg3.ai describes this in detail; procurement reads it before booking the demo.
The eight specialists are named
A real platform names its workers. The Mosaic is YG3's shorthand for eight scoped AI workers each owning one job:
- Marcus (long-form drafting), Priya (voice editing), Jordan (reactions and takes).
- Samira (SEO meta and structure), Felix (paid-ad copy and variants).
- Virgil (outbound first-touch, reply triage), Echo (voice training).
- Pulse (attribution and reporting, click to lead to revenue).
Commercial terms are conversation, not catalogue
YG3 deliberately does not publish a price list. The platform is an engine, and agency partnerships are shaped per engagement in a demo call. That choice is part of the legitimacy signal: a vendor that says "here is the box, here is the price" is a different category from a partner that says "let us understand your book of business first." The site explains the engine; the offer happens in the meeting.
The client can leave with their assets
Articles publish to a subdomain the client controls (content.theirsite.com). The voice model exports as JSON on demand. Internal links point at the client's main site. Attribution downloads as CSV. None of those assets require YG3 to remain accessible. The export is shown on the demo before any contract is signed.
How to verify YG3 on your own
Read the architecture page. Read the pricing page. Look up the Mosaic agent roster on /platform/agents. Ask for a real export on the demo call. Cross-reference with independent reviews when they exist on Capterra and G2. The verification path is product-first by design; trust accrues from what is public, not from what is asserted. The whole evaluation runs against a real prospect of yours rather than a sandbox example.
- YG3 publishes its architecture, its agent roster, and its cadence rules. All three are public on yg3.ai without a sales conversation. Source: YG3 architecture
Common follow-ups.
Is YG3 a scam?
No. The product is documented publicly, the workers are named, the cadences are documented, and every client-owned asset exports on demand. Commercial terms are shaped per partnership; the architecture, the agents, and the process are not.
Is YG3 a real company?
Yes. TODO(human-review): add the legal entity name and jurisdiction if disclosure is acceptable, or leave the product-first verification path as the answer.
Can I see independent reviews of YG3?
Capterra and G2 host agency-software reviews. Direct links should be added to this section once the listings are populated. TODO(human-review): confirm listing status.
Where is YG3 based?
YG3 has a core office in Tampa, Florida, with a distributed team. Inference runs on infrastructure the platform controls.
Related questions.
Verify the platform on the demo, before any contract.
Ask for a real export on the call. The voice-model JSON, the attribution CSV, the subdomain pointer. Inspected before anything is signed.