Tools Analysis
Massive routes your mail. CoBlack sends it straight
Massive is a server-side auto-apply service, but it routes recruiter replies through a proxy inbox and carries a 2.1 Trustpilot score against a 4.
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Massive applies. Then it holds your inbox.
Massive (usemassive.com) is an autonomous auto-apply service, built by Do a Huddle and started to apply for a laid-off friend, that runs on remote servers and submits applications for you around the clock (CBS News, 2025). It genuinely automates the whole thing, no autofill helper, no per-job click. It claims more than 100,000 users and a million applications sent. Where it gets contentious is not the applying. It is what Massive does with the replies.
What Massive does
Massive scrapes and matches roles from boards and aggregators including LinkedIn and Indeed, generates a tailored resume and cover letter per job on its top tier, and submits server-side (Adzuna, 2026). Recruiter responses route to a proxy address on the neuronmail.io domain rather than your own inbox. Pricing runs about 50 to 59 dollars a month with metered job caps, a short trial, and a money-back guarantee that is void if you have applied to too many jobs (Adzuna, 2026). Credit where due: the app is polished, and it works well for some, especially mid and senior engineers.
What the reviews say
The ratings diverge sharply, and honesty requires both. The iOS app holds about 4.7 from roughly 1,300 ratings, while Trustpilot sits at about 2.1 across roughly 40 reviews (App Store, 2026; Trustpilot, 2026). Impulse app ratings run high; the longer reviews, where paying users describe outcomes, run low. The proxy inbox is a repeated pain point: reviewers report interview invitations and coding-test links misrouted or filtered as spam, and access to that inbox and its recruiter history tied to keeping the subscription (Adzuna, 2026). Massive's own site says most people get one to two interviews per hundred applications (Massive, 2026).
Where CoBlack differs
Two differences stand out. First, CoBlack never sits between you and a recruiter: replies go straight to your own inbox, because a missed interview email is too high a price for a proxy. Second, sourcing and tailoring: CoBlack pulls from validated career pages and applicant tracking feeds with ghost filtering, rather than scraping boards where expired listings collect, and it tailors from a resume you have verified rather than generating from a scraped description, which is where reviewers report fabricated skills (Adzuna, 2026).
An honest parity note
To be fair: Massive and CoBlack both submit autonomously, server-side, with no review step, and both tailor per job on their higher modes. That autonomy is genuine on both sides, so CoBlack does not claim to have invented it. CoBlack's case is the parts around the apply, whose inbox the replies reach, whether the listing was real, whether the resume is true, and the price, which is zero. Targeted applications convert at roughly 7 to 9 percent versus 2 to 3 percent generic (Scale.jobs, 2026).
Who each tool serves
Massive can work for someone, often a senior engineer, who wants hands-off volume and does not mind a proxy inbox and a monthly fee. CoBlack is for the person who wants the replies to reach them directly, the listings to be real, and the bill to be nothing. Both send applications on their own. The difference is what happens after one lands.
Massive routes the reply through itself. CoBlack sends it straight to you, which is where an interview offer needs to arrive.
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