A New Polymarket Tool Is Already Running a Big UGC Wave

A new AI tool built for Polymarket users is already running a surprisingly large UGC campaign.
Polifly, previously called Polysight, is a new AI product designed to help users make better calls on prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi.

The use case is simple.
Users upload a screenshot of a market, the model scans relevant news and data tied to that specific question, and then returns a suggested pick.
That is the product.
What makes it interesting already is the distribution.

A fast-expanding UGC wave
Polifly started its creator push around the end of February.
At first, the campaign only involved three Instagram creators. By April, that number has grown to nearly 25.
The team is still clearly in testing mode, and there has not been a true breakout yet. But some creators are already showing traction strong enough to suggest the system could scale.
The clearest Instagram standout so far is @cashflow6919.
He has already grown the account to 5K followers using one repeatable format: “three websites that feel illegal to know” hooks, usually paired with an opening shot of two colorful drinks being poured at the same time.
One of his recent videos reached 132K views, 3.3K shares, and 4.3K saves.
Polifly is mentioned second, but it is the only tool he says by name and the one he spends the most time explaining. The other websites help the video feel more like genuine internet advice and less like a straight ad.
That makes Polifly the most memorable part of the post without forcing it too hard.
TikTok is finding a different angle
On TikTok, the strongest early signal is coming from @gianni.predicts.
The views are still relatively small, but the save numbers are unusually good for the size of the account, which suggests the audience sees the tool as useful, not just entertaining.
Two of the clearest examples are:
“IS THIS INSIDER TRADING?” 64K views, 2.1K saves, March 17
“POV: you’re living in 2030” 51K views, 2.1K saves, April 4

Both videos essentially work as direct website presentations.
Instead of advertising the product as just another betting tool, the hooks make it feel unfairly powerful, futuristic, or like something viewers were not supposed to find.
That is a strong fit for this category. People do not want “market analysis software.” They want an edge.
Why this is worth watching
Polifly has not gone properly viral yet, and the campaign still looks like a testing phase. But the fact that a prediction market specific analyzer is already running a nearly 25-creator UGC wave says a lot about where this new niche could go.
Prediction markets have grown enough that tools built specifically around them can now market themselves like consumer apps.

We already covered Polymarket’s own distribution on the website, and Polifly feels like the next layer forming on top of that ecosystem.

