Let’s talk about what actually matters for developers building at the intersection of AI and Web3.
At its core, an "AI agent" is just a loop: gather context, reason, act. That's it. But the impact comes from how and where this loop runs.
A bot on Telegram that replies with price charts? That’s not an agent—it’s a UI. A DeFi trading co-pilot that watches your wallet, reasons over market conditions, and executes when needed? That’s an agent.
The next wave is not single-action bots. It's AI flows—persistent agent logic embedded in wallets, DAOs, protocols. This is continuous context-awareness + autonomy, onchain.
Agents that:
Monitor your DeFi positions
Execute DCA or hedge strategies
Surface new opportunities
Interact with other agents or protocols based on logic, not rules
Why now?
LLMs gave us decent general-purpose reasoning. TEEs, ZK, and confidential compute give us safety and privacy. Crypto infra gives us autonomous, programmable money. The pieces are coming together.
We’re entering the era of “DeFAI”—where agents are products, not just features.
Most DeFAI projects launch with something live. That’s different from the last cycle. It’s not just “here’s a token, we’ll build later.” You can actually test the agents, see what they do, inspect outputs.
This is closer to real software than speculative wrappers.
But the risks are real. Many projects are slapping LLM wrappers on empty prompts. Some agents are just scripted bots with no reasoning. And security? A huge blind spot.
You’re trusting agents with private keys, market access, contracts. The attack surface is massive.
If you’re building: don’t fake the loop. Show reasoning. Show verifiable actions. Use transparent infra. Write for logs and debuggability. Don’t treat “agent” as a rebrand for “script.”
If you’re investing: evaluate live output. Demand visibility. Assume every project is vapor until proven otherwise.
Real agents will be long-running, adaptive, persistent logic layers that work autonomously across DeFi, governance, and marketplaces.
The question isn’t whether agents will matter. It’s whether you’ll build the ones that last after the hype dies.
Read more here: https://oasis.net/blog/ai-agent-hype-cycle
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