I kept watching the same thing happen.
A cloud consultant walks into a meeting. They know exactly what the client needs — better redundancy, smarter failover, real observability. Their solution is technically correct. Their pricing is fair.
They lose the deal anyway.
Not because they were wrong. Because the client couldn't see the problem.
You say "cascading node failure." The client hears "expensive IT stuff." You say "single point of failure in your payment pipeline." They hear "we want more money."
The consultant loses to a cheaper competitor who said less but showed more. A slick slide deck. A diagram. Something visual.
That's the gap I built for.
What I Built
It's a 3D interactive sales simulator. I call it a flight simulator for software — except instead of flying a plane, you're walking a non-technical client through the risk inside their own infrastructure.
Here's the mechanic:
The Map
You feed it a simple JSON file describing your client's tech stack. It reads it and instantly draws a floating, 3D web of nodes — servers, databases, APIs, services — with glowing dots shooting between them simulating live data flow. It looks alive. It looks expensive.
The Break
You hit "Run Stress Test." The simulator runs a hardcoded script. Dots speed up. Specific nodes turn red. A "Revenue Lost" counter starts ticking upward in real time. The client watches their system fail. They watch money leave.
You didn't tell them there was a problem. They saw it.
The Fix
You hit "Deploy Guardrails." Blue 3D shields wrap the vulnerable nodes. The system turns green. The Revenue Lost timer stops. The client watches the solution work.
You didn't explain what you'd do. They watched you do it.
The Customizer
Press Shift+C. A panel opens. You can rename every single node on the fly — right there in the meeting. In 30 seconds, "Node A" becomes "Stripe API." "Node B" becomes "Client PostgreSQL DB." Now it's not a demo. It's their system.
Presentation Mode
Press P. All the UI disappears. No buttons. No controls. Just a beautiful, breathing 3D graphic on screen. Perfect for screen sharing or projecting.
Why I Priced It the Way I Did
This tool exists for one reason: to help technical consultants close deals with non-technical buyers.
If a cloud consultant closes one $10,000 infrastructure engagement using this tool, the $297 one-time cost is invisible. That's the math I built around.
The Technical Side
Built and deployed on Vercel. The 3D rendering uses Three.js for the node web and animation layer. The JSON input makes it flexible — any stack, any client, any meeting.
The stress test and guardrails are scripted sequences, not random. That's intentional. A real sales meeting is not the place for unpredictable behavior. You need to know exactly what happens when you click that button.
The Loom Demo
I recorded a full walkthrough showing the map rendering, the stress test running, the guardrails deploying, and the customizer in action.
[https://www.loom.com/share/78f6048b4d1841fb90811b7bdcd70098]
Try It Live
The tool is deployed and live. You can load it, test it, break it, and see exactly what your client would see.
[https://digital-wind-tunnel.vercel.app/]
Who This Is For
If you sell cloud infrastructure, DevOps services, or managed AWS/GCP/Azure work to clients who don't have a technical background — this is for you.
If your prospects already understand Kubernetes pod scheduling and VPC peering — you probably don't need it. But if you've ever watched a client's eyes glaze over mid-pitch, you do.
First 2 Buyers
I'm offering this at $297 one-time to the first 2 buyers this week while I'm in early access.
Payment via PayPal: [https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/9UEG868JWYL8C]
After that the price goes up as I add more features and build out the customization layer.
Questions?
Drop them in the comments. I built this solo and I'm happy to talk through the technical decisions, the sales use cases, or anything else.
If you're a cloud consultant who has felt this exact pain — I'd genuinely love to hear how you're currently solving the "client can't see the problem" issue. That's the conversation that built this tool.
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