167 bots. 12 categories. One place to stop guessing which tool is worth your time.
Prediction markets have a discovery problem nobody talks about.
Polymarket crossed $1 billion in monthly volume. Kalshi got regulatory clarity. The space went from niche to something serious traders actually pay attention to. And somewhere in that growth, a parallel ecosystem quietly built up around it — copy trading bots, whale trackers, arbitrage scanners, analytics dashboards, Telegram alerts.
The problem: there was no good way to find any of it. You’d catch something on CT, someone drops a tool name in a Discord, you search it, find nothing useful, move on. The ecosystem was real. The discoverability wasn’t.
That’s the gap PolyZone fills.
What It Is
PolyZone is a curated directory of tools built for Polymarket, Kalshi, and adjacent prediction platforms. As of now it lists 167 tools across 12 categories — free to browse, no signup required.
Categories break down how you’d actually think about them: analytics, trading bots, AI trading, whale and wallet tracking, arbitrage, alerts, DeFi integrations, trading terminals. There’s even a “Satire / Fun” section, which honestly feels appropriate for a space that spent months with election markets as its biggest product.
Each listing has a description, tags, user ratings, and a direct link. No algorithmic feed, no sponsored placements. It’s structured like a product database, which is exactly what it should be.
The Tools Worth Knowing About
The top-rated listings give a decent picture of what the ecosystem actually looks like right now.
PolyCop (4.8 stars, 154 reviews) sits at #1. It’s a non-custodial Telegram bot for automating strategies and copying expert wallets on Polymarket. Non-custodial matters here — you’re not handing over keys to run automation.
Kreo and PolyWallet are both rated above 4.3. Kreo does whale-mirroring through a trading bot. PolyWallet is more of an analytics layer — wallet profit tracking, strategy comparison, real-time leaderboards. Different use cases, but both point at the same underlying behavior: people want to know what the smart money is doing and either follow it or measure against it.
Polytrage is the only tool in the arbitrage category and has a 4.5 rating. It scans for price inefficiencies across Polymarket and sends alerts. In a space where the same event can have different odds on Polymarket versus Kalshi, that’s a real edge if the tool works.
Ultramarkets is the one that raises eyebrows: it offers up to 10x leverage on prediction markets. Whether that’s something you want is a separate question, but it exists, it’s listed, and it has 91 reviews.
Why a Directory Makes Sense Right Now
The prediction market tool ecosystem is two years old, maybe three. It’s in that awkward phase where there are enough tools that you need help finding them, but not enough infrastructure that any single aggregator has won.
PolyZone isn’t trying to be a trading terminal or a research product. It’s solving a simpler problem: given that these tools exist, let people find the right one without spending an afternoon on CT threads.
The free access model is the right call for this stage. Friction kills discovery. If you’re browsing because you heard about copy trading on Polymarket and want to know what’s out there, you shouldn’t have to create an account to look at a list.
The submission process goes through Telegram, which is very on-brand for this space.
What It Doesn’t Do (Yet)
PolyZone ranks and reviews tools but doesn’t verify performance claims. A bot listed as “copying smart money” might be doing exactly that, or might not. The ratings are user-submitted. That’s useful signal but not the same as audited track records.
The arbitrage category has one tool. That feels thin for a space where cross-platform pricing gaps are real and probably growing as more platforms get traction.
And Kalshi coverage is lighter than Polymarket — 143 tools listed for Kalshi versus 165 for Polymarket, which tracks with where developer energy has been focused, but it’ll be interesting to see if that shifts post-regulation.
FAQ
Is PolyZone free to use? Yes. The directory is fully free to browse with no account required. Tool submissions go through their Telegram contact.
Does PolyZone build the tools it lists, or just index them? It’s purely a directory. PolyZone curates, ranks, and reviews third-party tools but doesn’t build or operate any of them itself.
Are the ratings on PolyZone verified? Ratings appear to be user-submitted reviews. They’re useful as directional signal but shouldn’t be treated as audited performance data — especially for trading bots where actual P&L matters more than stars.



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