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by solenoid0937 36 days ago
It's not bad at all. You get $200 in monthly extra usage credits. Unless you are a deeply unprofitable user this change is no big deal.
4 comments

The $200 plan is easily providing $2000 of AI usage. So with this change your bill goes from $200 to $200 + $2000 -$200 = $2000. That’s a 10x jump.

Stuff like gas town is dead in the water

is using a Ralph loop for all tasks with "claude -p" and using my weekly limit up to 100% considered some kind of unprofitable outlier? It's a command line tool, it would be ridiculous to expect that a large number of users don't do this. I never launch "claude" interactively by itself.

My understanding is that now with this workflow I will pay the same amount but get much less usage before getting to 100% for the week. How is that not bad?

They've probably (rightfully) identified long horizon autonomous development isn't quite there yet, so most stuff created by forcing Claude to run until you hit 100% of your weekly limits is going to be relatively low value slop that will not convert to long-term sticky spend/usage vs someone actively steering Claude until they hit their limit.

If anything you might be an outlier if you do this and are actually producing something of reasonable value down the line.

They know if the value provided by subsidized usage is too low, they're literally burning dollars for nothing: people won't feel any great pain losing it one day and definitely won't convert.

> Unless you are a deeply unprofitable user

Well..........

That was the point of the subscription. It gave you extremely discounted pricing, in exchange for recurring revenue.

For a normal subscription user, they would get multiple X of what they would if paying on-demand usage.

After the recent doubling of usage limits Opus 4.7 via claude -p barely offers enough usage on the Pro plan to review changes I make via Codex.

I assume that with API pricing it will run out in the first week and I might as well unsubscribe.