X / Twitter handle finder.
Type a niche, problem, or product. Gorilla matches it semantically against a curated catalog of thousands of X accounts and returns the people who actually post in that space, ranked by how closely they fit.
A handle finder that understands the topic, not just the keyword.
X's own search is keyword-bound: it finds accounts whose name or bio literally contains your word. That misses most of the people you actually want. Gorilla embeds your query and matches it against a hand-built catalog of accounts grouped by what they talk about, so "first-time SaaS founder" surfaces the builders and operators worth following even when none of them put that phrase in their bio.
Who is this for?
Founders mapping a niche before they post. Marketers building a list of voices to engage. Researchers who want the 20 accounts that anchor a community instead of scrolling for an hour. The catalog skews toward people who post substance, ask real questions, and reply, the accounts whose threads are full of buyer-intent, not the accounts that only broadcast.
How to use the results
1. Follow the askers, not just the stars. The most useful accounts in any niche are the ones who post questions and complaints. Their replies are where demand lives.
2. Read their recent replies. A handle's value isn't its follower count, it's the conversation underneath each post. That's where you'll find people describing the exact problem you solve.
3. Run your full idea through Gorilla. This finder gives you the accounts. The platform scopes searches to them, scores every post for intent, and hands you the actual buyer-intent posts.