June 18, 2026AgentsToolCoding

TesterArmy puts QA on autopilot

TesterArmy is a fresh Y Combinator launch building agents that test your web and mobile apps for you, continuously. You describe a test in plain English, and the agent goes and does it: navigates pages, fills forms, handles the annoying stuff like OAuth, OTP codes and login flows, and runs around the clock against your critical user journeys. When something breaks, it pings your team.

The output is the practical bit. You get screenshots, screen recordings and bug reports delivered through a dashboard, a CLI, or straight into a pull request, with hooks into GitHub, Slack and your CI pipeline. So it's not just a testing toy, it's meant to sit inside the workflow developers already live in and behave like a teammate who never sleeps and never skips the boring regression checks.

QA is honestly one of the cleanest jobs to hand an agent. It's repetitive, the success criteria are well-defined, and every run is measurable, which is exactly the shape of problem agents are good at. The space is getting crowded, with QA Crow and TestSprite already around, but the always-on monitoring angle is a real wedge versus the one-shot test-generation tools.

What I like here is the framing fits a bigger theme this week. Three of today's picks are all about making agents trustworthy from different sides: Pramaana proves the answer, VELA sandboxes the code, TesterArmy tests the app. Capability is solved enough that the money is moving to reliability. Check it at tester.army.
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