Most AI tools rely on chat boxes or API calls. Magus Lab rejected this approach. Instead, they developed The Grimoire—a tactile, visual interface that looks like a spell book.
In the rapidly evolving landscape of technology startups and R&D incubators, few names evoke as much mystery and ambition as Magus Lab. While the tech world is saturated with sleek, minimalist branding featuring generic geometric shapes, Magus Lab has carved out a distinct identity by bridging two seemingly opposite worlds: the cold, deterministic logic of machine learning and the boundless, symbolic potential of magic.
But what exactly is Magus Lab? Is it a software studio, a think tank, or a next-generation AI research facility? Depending on who you ask, it might be all three.
This is the question every rationalist asks.
I spoke to a woman in the lab who had lost her wedding ring. She used the Divination Engine. It told her to check the "third drawer, under the blue fabric, next to the thing that doesn't belong to you." She found the ring under a blue towel, next to a pen that belonged to her coworker.
Placebo? Coincidence? Confirmation bias?
Maybe.
But the Magus Lab has a rule: You are not allowed to debunk a result until you can replicate the result.
And no one has been able to replicate the silence that falls over the room when the robots stop moving. Or the way the temperature drops exactly 2.7 degrees during the Sigil Compilation. Or the fact that their server logs occasionally contain entries time-stamped for tomorrow.