No slogan. No corporate shine. No fake inspiration about “changing the world.” Just a sentence, dropped in the middle of Times Square like a dare.
People stopped. Took pictures. Screenshots bled across TikTok, X, LinkedIn. The billboard went viral not because it said something. But because it said almost nothing.
Behind it: Cluely. A new AI play wrapped in casual lowercase irreverence. Its founder and CEO, Roy Lee, decided that if the world doesn’t trust corporate marketing anymore, you may as well strip it bare. “The world has grown tired of corporate marketing and values, more than anything, transparency and to know people more than companies. We thought this hyper simple, hyper casual messaging that starts with my name and age was the best way to showcase this,” Lee said.
It worked. Overnight, their traffic quadrupled. The internet did what it does. It laughed. It guessed. It kept watching.
Cluely wasn’t supposed to exist.
Lee built something else first: Interview Coder. A side project. A hack. A way to cheat on LeetCode technical interviews. “Interview Coder was a tool I built designed to cheat on technical interviews, which I always thought was quite silly,” Lee admitted.
The tool worked. But what mattered wasn’t the answers. It was the interface. A translucent glass pane floating over the screen, feeding you responses in real time.
“As soon as I built the tool, I realized the user experience of an omniscient AI pane was very cool and had more potential application than just cheating on technical interviews.” Lee said.
The cheat code was the prototype. The feeling of AI whispering in your ear was the product. That was Cluely.
Cluely AI is an indicator of what comes next for crypto trading. An invisible pane feeding real-time cues in a high-pressure moment is exactly what traders in DeFi live and die by. Instant reads on blockchain flows, market depth, liquidity shifts. The same overlay that rescues a job interview could just as easily decide whether you catch the pump or miss it.
Cluely calls itself an “invisible desktop application.”
Think less software, more presence. Something that sits in the background, silent until the pressure spikes. Interviews. Sales calls. Meetings. The exact moments when your brain locks and you need the right line.

