Replies when you're away
Kicks in only if you haven't been online for N minutes. You're online — the bot stays out.
AI replies in your name in private chats: with a pause, with “typing…”, in natural language. It remembers the conversation, listens to voice messages, looks at photos and sends your catalog on request.
It's not that the bot can write. It's how it writes.
It reads the message, shows “typing…”, and waits — the typing time depends on how long the reply is. An instant answer at 3 a.m. gives a bot away immediately.
Three messages in a row don't turn into three replies. The bot collects them and answers once — to the point, not to every line.
The conversation history is saved — even after a computer restart. The bot won't greet you twice or ask what it already knows.
To “ok”, “thanks”, “got it” the bot doesn't invent a follow-up — it reacts 👍 and ends the conversation. Exactly what a real person does.
If you get free and message the client first, the bot instantly cancels its prepared reply. No duplicates, no awkwardness.
Kicks in only if you haven't been online for N minutes. You're online — the bot stays out.
Transcribes voice to text and answers the actual question, instead of “please send text”.
Understands what the client sent in the picture and answers meaningfully.
They ask for photos, a price list, video or a video note — the bot sends the right files with a caption.
“Price”, “address”, “delivery” — your own canned reply, an AI answer, or a reaction.
Mark conversations as exceptions — the bot won't write, react, or even mark them read.
A menu right inside Telegram: turn on, turn off, status, change the prompt — from any device.
AI unavailable or connection dropped — the bot holds the message and answers once things are back.
The persona prompt sets the tone, your products, prices, and how the bot leads to a sale.
The app runs on free Groq and Gemini keys. You pay once for the license — that's it.
Add keys from different free accounts. When one runs out of quota, the bot switches to the next one without interrupting the conversation.
The client sees a normal conversation with you: your name, your photo, ordinary messages. No “BOT” label next to your name and no buttons that give the automation away.
It runs on your computer — conversations and keys stay with you, no third-party servers in between.
Two builds — the same app, only packaged differently. Both: Windows 10/11, 64-bit, 7-day trial.
Download and run, nothing to install. Handy on a USB stick or for running several copies from different folders.
Download PortableUnpack the archive and run TgAutoReply.exe from inside. The app isn't packed into a single file, so antivirus software treats it more calmly.
Download ClassicThe app is bundled with the .NET runtime and compressed into a single file — the same packaging is used by ordinary software and by malware, so antivirus tools sometimes flag it just in case. That's a false positive: it means suspicious packaging, not an infection.
If your antivirus is strict — take the Classic build: the files sit in a plain folder with no packing, and it usually raises no objections.
Upload the downloaded file to VirusTotal — it checks against seventy antivirus engines at once. Reports for our builds:
Each build lists its SHA-256. It proves you downloaded our file and not a tampered one. On Windows: open PowerShell in the file's folder and run the command — the hash must match the one on this page.
No subscription for the AI: the app runs on free keys. You only pay for the license.
In the app click “🔑 License” — you'll see your computer's ID. Buy a key on the site: pick a period, paste the ID, pay in USDT (TRON / TRC20 network) — the key appears on your order page. Paste it, click “Activate” — done.
But as many copies on it as you like. You can run several Telegram accounts at once, each with its own settings, and pay only once.
Reinstalled Windows or changed computers — message me and I'll issue a new key.
Start the app, enter your number and the code from Telegram — like any normal login.
A free Groq (or Gemini) key — signing up takes a couple of minutes.
A few lines: what you do, your prices, how to reply. Hit “Start” and the bot is working.
Messages come from your account — your name, your photo, an ordinary conversation. No “BOT” label. The bot holds pauses, shows “typing…”, remembers context and doesn't answer in templates.
There are no guarantees, of course — but that's exactly what the app's whole behaviour is built for.
The app automates your personal account, and Telegram restricts accounts for spam. That's why it has pauses between replies, daily limits and human-like behaviour.
The rule of thumb: only answer people who messaged you first. Mass outreach to strangers is exactly what gets accounts limited.
Nothing. The app runs on free Groq or Gemini keys — signing up takes a couple of minutes. Free tiers have a daily ceiling, but it's plenty for client conversations.
Need more? Add a second and third free key — the app switches between them automatically.
Yes. The app runs on your PC — while it's open, the bot replies. Turn it off and there are no replies.
In exchange, conversations, keys and settings stay only with you, with no third-party servers in between.
The message won't be lost: the bot holds it and replies as soon as the connection or quota is back. If you answer the client manually in the meantime, the bot cancels its own reply.
If recognition is on, the file is sent to Gemini (or your chosen AI) for processing so the bot understands the content. Don't want that — two checkboxes turn recognition off.
The conversations themselves are stored only on your computer.
No, the app is for Windows 10/11 (64-bit). But you can control the bot from your phone — right inside Telegram: turn it on or off, check status, change settings.
It's a false positive about packaging: the Portable build is compressed into a single file together with the .NET runtime. There's no infection — you can check the file on VirusTotal and compare the SHA-256 with the one listed here.
The easiest fix is the Classic build — it's unpacked into a plain folder, and antivirus software is fine with it.
Only the packaging — the app, the features and the license are identical. Portable is one file, easy to carry and to run in several copies. Classic is a folder of files, with fewer antivirus questions.
You can start with one and switch any time: settings and login are preserved.
Yes. Copy the app's folder somewhere else and launch a second copy — it gets its own settings, its own login and its own conversations.
No extra charge: the license is tied to the computer, not to the copy.
Run it for a week and see for yourself. Setup takes 10 minutes, then the bot works without you. If you like it, a lifetime license is $10.
Download · free for 7 daysQuestions — @N_Adrenalin