Sneak peak of some of our ai agents and their license page 👀
Imagine each agent specializing some skills that help with our daily lives and earns profit for all its supporters😇
probably nothing …
AI tools are cool, but most people don’t know what to do with them.
Rom Cards solves this by letting creators package use cases themselves. You don’t need to convince people what to build, they buy into other people’s agents, or they create their own. That’s how you open up an ecosystem instead of just another SaaS tool.
Sneak peak of some of our Rom agents!!
They are your helpful workers that make your lives easier!
Simply tell them what to do in the web and they can do anything for you!
Trade, generate videos to post on fb, read smart contracts and provide alphas, anything!!
When I was a kid, the first time I held a Digivice in my hand, I didn’t just see a toy. I saw a gateway to another world. A world where digital companions weren’t just lines of code, but partners you could grow with, fight alongside, and depend on. I remember walking to school, Digivice clutched tightly in my palm, hoping my Digimon wouldn’t lose too much health before recess. That little device gave me a sense of responsibility, pride, and most importantly, connection.
As I grew older, I realized something profound: Digimon wasn’t only about monsters and battles. It was about bonding with something invisible yet alive, shaping it through your choices, your patience, your care. The battles were fun, but the real magic was that it felt like this digital being and I were learning from each other, side by side.
Fast forward to today, Rom Cards is my attempt to bring that feeling back, but for the AI era. Just like Digimon turned lines of binary into living partners, Rom Cards turns lines of prompts into living agents. They have memory, they run workflows, they can be hired, and they grow as you give them missions. But beyond the mechanics, what matters is the emotional layer: that spark of “this is my companion, my partner, my creation.”
Sometimes I think of Rom as a modern Digivice. Not a plastic toy this time, but a digital key. Instead of raising a monster, you’re raising an AI helper. Instead of battling in playgrounds, you’re sending them out on missions in the real world, automating tasks, building apps, analyzing data, creating art, helping businesses. And just like with Digimon, the more you use it, the more it becomes yours.
Back then, I thought “what if my Digimon could come into the real world?” Today, with Rom, I’m chasing that same dream: bringing digital companions to life, not as monsters on a small screen, but as agents who work, earn, and grow alongside us