Coins sending to billions was the norm, we’ll get back there soon, casino revenues are at aths, sports betting is at aths, prediction markets etc
Bottom is near for memecoins
"This is a completely new DeFi primitive on Solana: crypto ETFs.
I’ve always thought this was a brilliant idea."
-@AlphaSeeker21
Projects w/ his support go minimum a couple hundred k typically, give it time and let it cook.
solana:5AAotrRLzBvojpLbT75f3x84oyhGrhnhkQatefBopump
1/ IDLE: The Game public beta is live.
The first game in history where playing makes your device power global compute infrastructure. Not points. Not tokens. Compute jobs. Running on your hardware right now.
Desktop available now - mobile support comes next.
https://t.co/O0ZLlG8J1r 🧵
$FIXER Protocol is one of those agentic payment rails that actually makes sense technically.
9LR7rbVdZVwXFF5riTznyvdrJXNf95ncsnx9Zdvwpump
AI agents are going to need payments that are programmable, policy-controlled, auditable, and fast. Not “open dashboard, click invoice, wait for human approval” payments. Real machine-to-machine settlement.
That is where Fixer comes in.
One https://t.co/FcoP6L8XUi() call can route across x402 and MPP, detect the right payment protocol, enforce spend policies before funds move, and settle on Solana with a verifiable tx hash.
The clean part is the abstraction.
Agents should not care whether an endpoint wants x402, MPP, or whatever payment standard wins next. They should call, pay, receive, and continue execution. Fixer turns that into a developer primitive.
The more interesting part is the control layer:
daily budgets
per-call limits
domain allowlists
rate limits
webhooks
multi-agent cost attribution
ZK private transactions when needed
That is not just “payments for AI agents.”
That is infrastructure for autonomous agents that can spend without becoming reckless black-box wallets.
Solana settlement gives it speed.
x402/MPP routing gives it interoperability.
ZK privacy gives it enterprise-grade optionality.
Policy enforcement gives it safety.
The agent economy will not run on manual Stripe checkouts.
It needs rails built for agents.
Fixer Protocol is positioning right in that gap.
$FIXER
@fixerprotocol