🧵1/ The x402 conversation is finally moving beyond theory.
What's becoming interesting is seeing which teams are actually turning the standard into usable infrastructure.
@PayGo402 is one project worth paying attention to.
@CambrianNetwork@PayGo402 is worth a look.
They're building x402 powered infrastructure for agentic commerce, helping AI agents, APIs, and services monetize and settle transactions at the request level.
🧵1/ The x402 conversation is finally moving beyond theory.
What's becoming interesting is seeing which teams are actually turning the standard into usable infrastructure.
@PayGo402 is one project worth paying attention to.
@coinbureau 100M+ agentic txs on Base. 95% of x402 value >$1.
This is real agent spending, not just micropayments.
@PayGo402 got me spining
Live.Scaling. No API keys. Just per‑request settlement.
The machine payment layer has arrived.
🔥AI AGENTS ARE STARTING TO MOVE REAL MONEY ONCHAIN
Agentic payment activity on Base has topped 100 million transactions, per Chainalysis.
Transfers above $1 now make up 95% of x402 transaction value, up from 49% in early 2025.
That suggests x402 is moving beyond micropayments into higher-value agent payments.
@0xsamgreen@CambrianNetwork Would be interesting to see @PayGo402 on the research radar.
They're building around x402 powered request level settlement, helping AI agents, APIs, and services transact and monetize on a pay-per-use basis.
@FDavidsonT@LangChain Love Odessia live feature
One interesting direction could also be integrating infrastructure like @PayGo402.
A pay-per-use model could make a lot of sense allowing agents to access exactly what they need, when they need it, without complex subscription layers
@0xJeff@cuysheffield@organ_danny 10/
My current thesis:
The winners in machine commerce won't just be protocols.
They'll be the teams that solve integration, verification, settlement coordination, and developer adoption.
That's why @PayGo402 is becoming an interesting implementations to watch in the x402 eco
@0xJeff@cuysheffield@organ_danny 9/
The interesting question isn't:
"Can x402 work?"
The interesting question is:
"Which teams are building the infrastructure layer that makes x402 usable at scale?"