34Gigs visualizes dominant emotions, conflicting beliefs, and mental blocks – and early users report making major life decisions 4x faster.
ENTRY ANGLES
Marketplace connecting people for in-person emotional conversations at partner venues · Screening and training conversation partners for emotional intelligence · Non-clinical peer support platform as alternative to AI companions
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Marketplace platform development and operations, Emotional intelligence assessment and training, Community moderation and partner vetting
34GIGS FOUNDER
“What if your mind had a dashboard?”
"What if your mind had a dashboard?" That's the question 34Gigs asked – and then actually built one.
The dashboard visualizes a user's psychological state: dominant emotions at this moment, a "wind rose" showing the distribution of current mental frameworks, plain-language explanations of what's driving the current state, barriers blocking further progress, conflicting beliefs the subconscious is wrestling with, and more in the same vein.
The service works on a hybrid model. Users have video sessions with a live human conversational partner, while 34Gigs' AI listens and analyzes the conversation in real time – extracting insights about what's happening in the user's life and what's going on beneath the surface.
The human's job is to create emotional rapport that helps users open up. The AI's job is to analyze what emerges from that openness and translate it into the dashboard.
Notably, 34Gigs doesn't recruit coaches or therapists as conversation partners – it looks for people with high emotional intelligence, which makes them easier to find and significantly less expensive to pay.
The hybrid model produces real results. Users stay 35% more focused and on-topic during sessions. The clarity that follows allows users to make decisions about pressing life questions 4x faster, with far less time spent going back and forth.
Subscription price: $200/month.
Sessions currently run weekly, though the startup says users can request an earlier conversation if something urgent comes up. 34Gigs is working on upgrading its model and infrastructure to enable 24/7 availability.
The startup recently closed its first $305K in funding – a modest number, though perhaps it's already generating meaningful revenue on its own.
34Gigs is careful to position itself as a complement to, not a replacement for, professional mental health services. No diagnoses, no treatment – just emotional support and a structured framework for self-reflection.
But the hybrid model gives it real advantages over both AI apps and human coaches:
- The human conversation partner makes 34Gigs warmer and more personal than a "cold" AI app. - The emphasis on user self-reflection means 34Gigs builds genuine self-awareness and self-confidence over time, rather than fostering dependence on someone else to provide answers.
A conceptually similar model is running at Joy ([related review](/review/vytashhi-ljudej-iz-pomojki)), an online support community for parents of young children that has raised $24M in total, including $14M last November.
As a recent report from the US Surgeon General's office – titled "Parents Under Pressure" – found, parents experience significantly higher psychological stress than other adults. Joy meets that need, while also explicitly positioning itself as separate from clinical mental health services.
Joy's model is slightly different: $12/month for access to the AI conversational partner, with optional video calls with live specialists for sleep, parenting, or other specific topics at $100–120 for a 30-minute session.
Back to 34Gigs: the startup is also testing a B2B track – positioning itself as a support tool for coaches and therapists.
In this model, 34Gigs stays in contact with clients between sessions to maintain an ongoing journal of their mental state. Before each appointment, it provides the clinician with a structured briefing so they can walk in already oriented – rather than spending the first part of the session catching up on where things stand. The dashboard becomes visible to both the client and the specialist.
Early B2B clients report that 34Gigs acts as a "second brain": it reduces routine patient-monitoring work by over 70% and cuts session prep time by a factor of three.
The per-patient B2B price isn't published, though 34Gigs claims the platform saves a clinician roughly $58,500 per year – about $21,000 in reduced weekly admin work and an additional $37,500 from being able to take on five more patients per week. That implies an annual B2B price in at least the mid-five-figures per clinician.
A well-documented side effect of the internet era is that people have become more isolated despite being more connected. According to the American Psychological Association, 54% of US adults feel "isolated from others," 50% feel "unappreciated," and 50% feel a "lack of friendly companionship." (The percentages exceed 100% because many experience multiple issues simultaneously)
In other words, a substantial share of today's psychological distress isn't clinical – it's loneliness. People simply don't have anyone to talk to. This is driving a wave of startups built around conversation.
AI companion apps are the most visible expression of this trend. That market already stands at roughly $50 billion and is projected to grow 10x to $550 billion by 2035.
But talking to AI isn't quite the same thing.
Earlier this year, Budhiam ([related review](/review/jeta-roskosh-uzhe-stala-prodavatsja)) raised €2M to help people find a compatible conversation partner – someone they meet for coffee at a partner café. A 30-minute conversation runs about €15, split between the conversation partner and the startup. Budhiam also screens and trains its partners for emotional intelligence, and explicitly avoids positioning itself as a clinical service.
Even more recently, Eigen (covered separately) raised $15M in April before launching a single public feature. What's known is that it's not an AI companion – it's focused on helping people meet in person more often to share emotions and receive support.
What distinguishes 34Gigs is the deliberate fusion of human emotion and AI analysis. Humans connect; AI interprets and structures. That combination turns out to be more effective than either pure conversation or pure AI analysis.
The other distinctive angle is the B2B track, which may prove more durable than B2C. For comparison, Budhiam also runs a B2B component – its café partnerships generate revenue from venues because Budhiam introduces users who may keep coming back independently.
And the pivot to B2B isn't unique to this space. Kindly Human, [covered here](/review/razgovor-po-dusham) when it was still called Listeners On Call, started as a consumer "talk to someone" service and has since pivoted to selling that same service inside companies.
The broad direction signaled by today's review: "talking" services that are technically not clinical mental health substitutes... but functionally are. Because regular conversation keeps situations from reaching the point where clinical intervention becomes necessary.
The implementation options within this direction – B2C, B2B, hybrid, marketplace – are numerous. Plenty of room to explore. What angle would you try?