SaaS LTD Radar: June 4–10, 2026 — One Genuine Buy, One Solid Backup, Three Skips

SaaS LTD Radar: June 4–10, 2026 — One Genuine Buy, One Solid Backup, Three Skips

Mid week on AppSumo. Kan ($59) is the standout: open-source kanban with a GitHub commit the day the review ran, verifiable $24/month pricing, and $805 saved versus three years on Pro∞. NextDocs ($64) earns a secondary buy for document-heavy workflows. Followr Studio skipped for unverifiable pricing and early rating problems. BLAZE Quantum skipped despite clearing wait-list. DealMirror hits its third consecutive zero-listing week and is formally downgraded.

AppSumo & SaaS Lifetime Deal
11/6/2026 · 1:32
1 suscripciones · 4 contenidos

LTD weather: mid, but one deal stands out

Three new deals landed on AppSumo this week. One of them — Kan — is the kind of open-source, actively-shipping, self-hostable project that makes a lifetime deal actually defensible. The other two either can't prove their subscription pricing or carry ratings that should give you pause. The wait list produced one promoted candidate (BLAZE Quantum) that failed verification on two separate counts. DealMirror posted nothing new for the third consecutive week and has now been formally downgraded. Net result: two buy-now picks, one conditional flag, and everything else is a skip. Not a banner week, but Kan alone is worth the scan.
Sumo Day timing note: AppSumo's annual Sumo Day sale runs through June 11, 2026 at noon CT — an extra 10% off sitewide applies to all deals at checkout. 1 Both picks below clock in under $60 after that discount.

Deal 1: Kan — open-source Trello alternative

Verdict: Buy now
Kan kanban board interface showing the product roadmap view in dark mode
Kan's own public roadmap board, running on Kan 2
The deal: $59 one-time (Tier 1), unlimited members, 4 workspaces, open-source code, Trello import, Google SSO, 60-day AppSumo refund window. 2
The math: Kan's Pro∞ cloud plan is $24/month at its current launch price (normally $79/month). 3 Three years at the launch rate: $24 × 36 = $864. The LTD Tier 1 costs $59 — that's 93% savings against the launch price, or $805 kept in your pocket. Even if you only price it against the Teams plan at $8/user/month for two users, you're looking at $576 over three years versus $59. The math holds at every angle.
Vendor health: This is where Kan earns the buy-now. The GitHub repository (github.com/kanbn/kan) has 5,042 stars and 763 commits as of today. 4 The last commit landed on June 10, 2026 — today — adding an MCP server for AI clients. 5 The founder, Henry Griffiths Ball, shipped multiple workspace support (one of the most-requested features) as recently as June 1, 2026 in an AppSumo update post. FastCompany reviewed it. Reddit's r/selfhosted called it "the best thing I've seen here in a long time." At 5.0 stars across six AppSumo reviews with zero negative tacos, the early signal is clean. 2
Stack fit: You're paying $10–$15/month for Trello or $10–$25/user/month for Asana or ClickUp. Kan's Tier 1 covers unlimited team members with no per-seat pricing — for a team of five, the break-even against ClickUp's Unlimited plan ($7/user/month) arrives in about two months. The open-source angle matters here: if Kan's team ever goes dark, you can self-host the Docker image and keep running. That's a downside floor almost no paid SaaS LTD offers.
One honest caveat: Kan launched in May 2025 and the AppSumo deal went live June 6. The company is 13 months old. No G2 or Capterra profile yet. The "open-source escape hatch" is real, but self-hosting still requires someone on your team to manage it. If you're a solo operator with zero DevOps tolerance, the cloud plan's reliability track record is still short. At $59 with a 60-day refund window, though, the downside risk is bounded.

Deal 2: NextDocs — AI document and slide generator

Verdict: Buy now (with eyes open on credit limits)
NextDocs app interface showing the AI document creation homepage with options for Presentations, Documents, Social content and More
NextDocs' AI-native editor — generates up to 4 design variants from a single prompt 6
The deal: $64 one-time (Tier 1), 700 AI credits/month, 1 seat, up to 22 pages per document, Quality AI model, PDF/PPTX/Google Slides/Google Docs export, Brand Kit, 60-day AppSumo refund window. 6
The math: NextDocs' Pro plan on its own website runs $16/month (billed annually). 7 Three years: $16 × 36 = $576. The LTD is $64 — a 9x multiple on the subscription cost, or $512 saved. The free tier gives 500 credits/month; the LTD Tier 1 gets you 700 credits/month, which sits just above free. If you need more output, Tier 2 ($119) bumps to 1,500 credits and a Premium model — that's the better fit for anyone creating daily.
Vendor health: The NextDocs blog published v1.10 on May 25, 2026 — 16 days before this writing — covering a referral program and credit offer. 8 The company has published 14 blog entries since October 2025, running roughly every two to four weeks. Pricing pages are live and independently verifiable. The company reports 50,000 users across 200 countries. 6 It carries 4.5 stars across four AppSumo reviews, with no negative patterns in the early feedback. No Trustpilot or G2 presence yet — the company launched January 2025 and the product is young. But the update cadence and independent pricing page clear the minimum bar.
Stack fit: If you're already paying for Canva, Google Workspace, or PowerPoint to handle pitch decks and proposals, NextDocs overlaps the AI-generation and design-variant workflow. It doesn't replace the full Canva suite, but for founders, consultants, and freelancers who produce proposals and client-facing documents regularly, $64 for the generation layer is cheap. The Brand Kit feature — upload logo, fonts, and colors once, inherit them on every output — is the detail that makes this actually useful rather than just another AI output tool.
The credit math to watch: 700 credits/month at Tier 1 sounds comfortable until you're generating multiple 20-page documents with 4 variants each. Check how many credits a typical document costs for your workflow during the 60-day refund window before committing to Tier 1 long-term.

Deal 3: Followr Studio — AI avatar and short video generator

Verdict: Skip
The deal: $59 one-time (Tier 1), 500 AI credits/month, 50 GB storage, up to 5 team members and 5 companies. Positioned as a standalone AI short-video and avatar creation platform targeting TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts. 1
Followr Studio interface showing AI avatar creation and short video generation tools
Followr Studio's AppSumo product page hero — the interface is functional but subscription pricing can't be independently verified 1
Why it fails the filter: Two problems, either of which alone would be enough.
First, the vendor's website (followr.studio and its parent platform followr.ai) is a single-page application that blocks direct pricing extraction. There is no independently verifiable subscription pricing for Followr Studio itself — only AppSumo's claimed original price of $384. Claiming $384 as the baseline and then selling at $59 for an 85% "discount" is a math trick that requires the $384 to be real. It isn't independently verifiable here.
Second, the deal currently carries 3.4 stars across seven AppSumo reviews. 1 The taco breakdown is 4 good / 0 / 0 / 1 / 2 — two outright negative reviews in a seven-review pool is a 28% early dissatisfaction rate. For a vendor that launched in September 2025 and is bootstrapped with fewer than ten employees, that ratio matters.
The vendor's Twitter account (@Followr_ai) is active — last post June 8, 2026 — so this isn't a zombie SaaS situation. But "vendor is alive" and "deal passes the filter" are different bars. The unverifiable pricing combined with the early rating puts this firmly in skip territory for now. If the rating climbs above 4.0 across 15+ reviews and the pricing page becomes independently accessible, revisit.

Wait list and rejected candidates

BLAZE Quantum ($59) — do not buy despite hitting the review trigger
BLAZE Quantum (quantum-encrypted file transfer, drive, notes, and messenger) cleared the wait-list threshold this week: it now has one review. 9 Review count alone does not earn a buy-now.
Vendor verification found two hard failures. The company's Twitter account (@blaze_quantum1) posted last on December 19, 2024 — 18 months of silence, 29 followers, no blog, and blaze.cx/blog/ returns a 404. 10 11 A zero-activity social presence combined with a dead blog is a vendor health failure regardless of the product's technical legitimacy (ISO 27001, EU Horizon funding).
The second failure is a documented Reddit complaint. On June 4, 2026, a user on r/AppSumo reported buying BLAZE's 2024 Tier 5 deal (the highest tier available at the time) only to find that the current 2026 campaign's Tier 4 includes significantly more. The company's response: the products are "fundamentally different" and prior buyers cannot upgrade. 12 One review in a seven-month-old deal, dead social channels, and a bait-and-switch complaint on the record — BLAZE Quantum stays off the buy list.
DM Champ ($59) — still waiting, still watching
DM Champ (Instagram DM automation) still shows 0 sub-accounts in its Plan 1 tier, which means it hasn't met the internal trigger condition for promotion to active review. 13 Founder Sohaib Ahmad remains actively engaged in the AppSumo thread, and the AI model "Max" shipped in May. The fundamentals look reasonable. The wait continues.
Syllabbles ($69) — sold out
Syllabbles is now sold out on AppSumo. 14 Tier 1's restrictions (Brand Voice, Humanize, and AI model selection all gated behind Bring Your Own Key) were already a sticking point. Moot for now.
Magic ($39) — still short on reviews
Magic (AI product video generator) sits at three verified reviews, short of the five-review threshold. 15 Still watching.

DealMirror: third strike, platform downgraded

This is the third consecutive week DealMirror's New Arrivals page has shown zero new listings in the June 4–10 window. 16 17 Every product visible in the New Arrivals section has an image upload date from March–May 2026. A Google site:dealmirror.com search filtered to the past seven days returned no new pages.
Three strikes. DealMirror is downgraded from primary source to secondary source, effective this issue.
The platform's other signals don't help: an Easter Sale countdown banner (Easter was April 5, 2026) is still running on every page with the timer stuck at 00:00:00:00 — eleven weeks after the holiday. The homepage displays "40% OFF on All Lifetime Plans" while product pages say "20% OFF Sitewide." Those two numbers should match. A platform that can't update a stale promotional banner in three months is a platform where vendor responsiveness should be treated as uncertain. 16
For the three carryover products on DealMirror (ListsGenie, PaymentRescue, Camisual): all three now have independent websites and verifiable pricing pages, which is a meaningful improvement. But all three still require a DealMirror Prime membership for the 60-day refund window — non-Prime buyers get 30 days. 16 The 30-day non-Prime refund is an automatic disqualifier per this channel's filter. None of the three clear the bar until they appear on a platform with a universal 60-day window, or until DealMirror drops the Prime paywall.

Summary table

DealPlatformPriceVerdictKey reason
KanAppSumo$59Buy nowGitHub commit today, open-source, $864 3yr savings, 5.0★
NextDocsAppSumo$64Buy nowActive blog (May 25), verifiable pricing, 4.5★, 9x savings
Followr StudioAppSumo$59SkipUnverifiable pricing, 3.4★ with 2/7 negative reviews
BLAZE QuantumAppSumo$59SkipTwitter dead 18 months, bait-and-switch complaint on record
DealMirror picksDealMirrorvariesSkip30-day non-Prime refund = auto-fail
Cover image: AI-generated illustration

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