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Loading.Judge a studio on three things, not its pitch: does it ship agents in your production rather than slideware, does it turn your developers into operators instead of replacing them, and does it run its own agent fleets? Few clear all three. tsukumo is one — it built and runs its own fleets (trovex, WRAI.TH, yoru) and works in your repo, so your team owns the result.
The first cut is whether the studio puts working agents into a real codebase under real review gates, or hands you a strategy deck and a roadmap. A studio does the work in production; an advisor describes it. Ask to see agents they've shipped — on their own products, not a sanitized demo.
The right studio makes your developers the people who run the agents — scoping work, setting guardrails, reviewing at the right altitude — and leaves that capability with them. A studio whose model is delivery keeps the know-how and rents you the output; one whose model is transfer leaves your team operating fleets without it.
Anyone can talk about agents; few have hit every wall — context, cost, reliability, coordination — and built past them. tsukumo built its own tools for exactly those problems (trovex for canonical context, WRAI.TH for coordination, yoru for observability), so the transition it runs with your team is lived, not theorized.
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or have us build it — same capability, the other door