
Motchi.art is a design tool that allows users to create custom mascots for apps and brands. Users can design a mascot by describing it in text, and the platform generates animated versions of the character, including motions such as waving, idling, and celebrating. The mascots can be exported in Lottie and WebP formats with transparent backgrounds, making them easy to integrate into various applications, websites, or content without the need for a designer.
The service is geared towards developers and brands looking to enhance their digital presence with unique animated characters. Users can…
The numbers paint a clear, compact picture: the product is monetized (revenue-stage) but on a very small base, and recent momentum is negative. Traffic is tiny (213 monthly visitors), which helps explain why $119 and $76 are low and why a steep -61% occurred. A 75% margin suggests the offering is capital-light or productized, so each dollar of revenue is relatively profitable.
For a founder that’s useful — existing paying users and high margins mean the core tech or workflow likely works at a unit level. For someone evaluating this as an opportunity, the risks are obvious: weak acquisition/visibility and a sharp recent decline in revenue. The fact it’s listed for sale adds a practical signal about the founder’s intent and the asset’s availability, but it doesn’t change the underlying operating challenges shown by traffic and growth metrics.
A judgment from project data — not a user review.