Polymarket Bot Comparisons (2026)
Every matchup gets the same treatment: an 11-row capability matrix, the weighted score table, key facts side by side, and a verdict written for that specific pair — not a template with the names swapped.
PolyBot head-to-heads
- PolyBot vs Axiom
A prediction-market specialist against a multi-asset trading terminal that added predictions weeks ago. Axiom brings YC backing, reported million-user scale, and sub-400ms token execution — but its Polymarket surface has no published fees, no documented exits or copy tooling, and unresolved February 2026 insider-conduct allegations hanging over the brand.
- PolyBot vs Bagel
A social prediction app built for taps and a trading bot built for rules rarely compete for the same user. Bagel is the friendliest entry point we verified — feeds, chat, one-tap copying on native mobile — while PolyBot supplies the automated mirroring, exits, and claiming that Bagel deliberately leaves out.
- PolyBot vs Betmoar
These two tools do different jobs: PolyBot is an automation bot — copy trading, protective exits, auto-claim — while Betmoar is a free manual terminal whose custody asks you to trust almost nothing and whose volume is verifiable on Polymarket's own builders leaderboard. The right pick depends on whether a machine or you pulls the trigger.
- PolyBot vs Bullpen
Bullpen puts Polymarket in the same terminal as Solana tokens and Hyperliquid perps, backed by the only public bug bounty and CLI we verified; PolyBot stakes everything on prediction markets and out-builds it there — exits, auto-claim, group discovery, and a fee that's actually published.
- PolyBot vs Fireplace
The sharpest custody split in our lineup: a self-custodial Telegram bot whose Safe key you can export, against an institutional terminal that is custodial by its own Terms of Use — keys held by Enclave, liability capped at $1,000 — yet ships the most advanced order and exit engineering in the comparison.
- PolyBot vs Kreo
PolyBot and Kreo are the top two Polymarket bots we verified, and custody is nearly a draw — both build on Safe infrastructure with 2FA. The matchup is decided by fee structure (flat 1% versus a curve peaking near 1.75% at 50¢), copy-filter depth, and platform surface, with Kalshi coverage as Kreo's genuine counterpunch.
- PolyBot vs PolyCop
PolyCop undercuts every hosted bot we verified at 0.5% per executed trade; PolyBot charges double that but pairs it with the clearest custody documentation in the niche, trailing stops, auto-claim, and a Mini App. This is price versus completeness — with a custody dispute sitting on PolyCop's side of the ledger.
- PolyBot vs PolyCopy
Two credible copy-trading products built for different desks: PolyBot lives in Telegram with an isolated self-custodial Safe, flat 1% pricing, and execution-side filters; PolyCopy is a web-only quant platform whose Copy Score, Kelly sizing, and statistical thresholds are unmatched — behind a $30/month subscription for real-funds automation.
- PolyBot vs PolyGun
This matchup is about the distance between marketing and documentation. PolyBot's self-custodial Safe, key export, and 2FA are vendor-documented with no incidents on record; PolyGun markets non-custodial architecture that independent research outlet Open Measures reports actually involves server-stored private keys, alongside fee claims its own third-party reviewers contradict.
- PolyBot vs Polymtrade
One of these products has shipped its automation stack and the other has published it as a roadmap. Polymtrade brings native iOS and Android apps, card and Apple Pay on-ramps, and 7,600 active users; PolyBot brings live copy trading, protective exits, and auto-claim that Polymtrade lists as upcoming.
- PolyBot vs Polytrader.app
A documented, verified bot against a Public Beta order-book terminal run by an operator who discloses almost nothing: no fee schedule, no company name, no changelog. Polytrader.app's custody design is genuinely sensible — the gap is everything around it.
- PolyBot vs Stand
The tightest matchup in this comparison set: a Telegram-native bot covering the whole trade lifecycle against the strongest web terminal we verified, with custody stories close enough to call a draw. Stand undercuts on copy fees and adds Kalshi plus counter-trading; PolyBot answers with trailing stops, auto-claim, and three surfaces.
- PolyBot vs Traderline
A registered Portuguese firm with a 2011-era Betfair lineage pointing a professional desktop ladder at Polymarket, versus a Telegram bot automating the whole lifecycle. Traderline owns the manual-execution crown and the identity high ground; PolyBot owns everything a ladder can't do while you sleep.
- PolyBot vs WagerUp Pilot
A full-lifecycle copy bot meets a sports-only specialist with the most incentive-aligned pricing we verified: WagerUp Pilot charges nothing unless the trade wins. The trade-off is a self-custody claim resting on an undocumented key architecture, a narrower filter set, and no per-position exits.
Competitor matchups
- Betmoar vs Polymtrade
Betmoar and Polymtrade are the two highest-volume terminals on Polymarket's builders leaderboard, solving opposite problems: Betmoar is the zero-fee power terminal for desktop traders with an existing Polymarket wallet, Polymtrade the app-store on-ramp for mobile users starting from a bank card.
- Kreo vs Betmoar
A copy-trading bot against a free manual terminal: Kreo automates entries, exits, and mirroring across both Polymarket and Kalshi for a curve-based fee, while Betmoar charges nothing, touches nothing — your funds stay in Polymarket's contracts — and backs it with the most verifiable volume record in our comparison. Which wins depends entirely on whether you automate.
- Kreo vs PolyCop
Kreo versus PolyCop splits cleanly along the security-versus-price axis: Kreo's Privy enclaves, Safe infrastructure, and 2FA against PolyCop's 0.5% flat rate — the cheapest hosted-bot pricing we verified and roughly a third of Kreo's cost at 50¢ odds. Each wins its dimension decisively; the question is which dimension runs your decision.
- Kreo vs PolyGun
On custody and track record this is the most lopsided pairing we cover: Kreo documents enclave-generated keys, Safe wallets, and trade-only bot permissions with a clean incident history, while independent research from Open Measures reports users' private keys living on PolyGun's servers behind non-custodial branding. PolyGun's simplicity and huge community don't close that distance.
- PolyCop vs PolyGun
The budget end of the Telegram-bot market: PolyCop's documented 0.5% flat rate, preset AFK engine, and per-copy risk controls against PolyGun's contradictory fee claims and the Open Measures report of server-stored keys. Both carry custody questions and lookalike-domain warnings — but the questions differ sharply in weight.