How to Build an AI AGENT TEAM That RUNS YOUR BUSINESS for $3 month
Video summary
Companion notes
Boxmining runs their YouTube operation on a fleet of $3 OpenClaw agents orchestrated by a single bot called Stark.
Why one agent stopped working
Stark started as a personal assistant. Once the team shared him across members, he began answering requests for Ron, Martin, and everyone else. Context piled up, he got "forgetful," and the setup turned into "a big show." The fix: stop giving one agent every tool, and stop sharing one agent across humans.
Specialized agents, $3 each
Every agent runs on its own Zebra $3/month VPS — the host the team picked after asking hacker friends to confirm it's the cheapest option that works ("Don't go for Digital Ocean. Don't spend $15. Spend $3."). Each one owns one job:
- Banner — research specialist. Has full YouTube API access, pulls transcripts of trending videos, and maintains his own database of past Boxmining videos. He reads every comment and proposes the next video topics.
- Grandmaster — owns the "Fidget Flow" mini-game project. Personality modeled on Jeff Goldblum's Grandmaster in Thor. Copied from Stark using the prompt: "Copy your memory relevant to fidget game to Grandmaster. Copy your relevant skills and memory you think are important."
- Stark — orchestrator only. Holds memory, soul, and skills of every other agent, and is the only bot the humans talk to directly.
How the babies get spawned
Manually installing eight OpenClaw instances is "a pain," so Stark gets raw credentials: server IP, username, password, Discord token. He SSHes in, installs OpenClaw, copies his own skill/memory files, and stands up the new agent. A "baby Stark" is born without a human touching the server.
Real-world numbers from the team
A teammate spent 3 days running Ralph loops on every Polymarket strategy they could find. Best result: 55% win rate. A friend's "92% win rate over 300 trades" netted $5 on a $10 stake because losers were sized to wipe out winners. Polymarket bot-making is not a business model — the agent fleet is.
What to ask for next
The team is collecting comment-driven video topics and will publish what works and what breaks (Grandmaster had API timeouts — "that's something to deal with in another video").
Watch on YouTube
Prefer the native player? Open it on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6997xGb0gg
