Free / Pro
See Free and Pro through the stage of your operations.
This is organized around when each plan feels natural, not just how many features exist. Start on Free, then look at Pro when weekly routines begin to settle in.
Free
Start the first step without friction
Up to 10 schedules. Centered on `/schedule_add`, `/schedule_test`, and `/schedule_list`, with only four required inputs to get started.
Pro
Run weekly operations with less effort
Removes the schedule cap and unlocks `/schedule_add_advanced`, `/schedule_edit`, `/schedule_edit_quick`, and `/pattern_save` to reduce repetitive weekly work.
Upgrade timing
Upgrade when the same work keeps repeating
The right moment is when schedules increase and you want control over morning post time, reminders, remaining slots, and reusable patterns.
| Item | Free | Pro |
|---|---|---|
| How many schedules you can keep | Up to 10 schedules. Fine for trial use, but the cap becomes visible once you run multiple recurring events. | No schedule cap. Better suited to weekly operations and multiple parallel events. |
| What you can set during creation | Only `title / date / time / join_guide`. Low friction and easy for first-time admins. | Also includes morning post time, reminder minutes, remaining slots, and testimonials from the start. |
| Main commands available | `/schedule_add` `/schedule_test` `/schedule_list` `/schedule_participants`. Built to stay simple. | Everything in Free plus `/schedule_add_advanced` `/schedule_edit` `/schedule_edit_quick` `/pattern_save` `/pattern_delete`. |
| Editing convenience | Basic operation works, but detailed post-launch changes still feel manual. | Full edit and one-field quick edit make ongoing adjustments much faster. |
| Repeatable workflow | Best when you rely on built-in samples and are still testing your preferred format. | Lets you save your own recurring format and cut repeated weekly input. |
| Admin-side payoff | Best for getting to a working setup quickly and proving the flow inside your server. | Best when you want fewer manual corrections, reusable patterns, and more room to scale operations. |