Web3 Matters started with Spaces as part of a media lane.
But the world changed.
AI agents are turning one-person teams into operator stacks.
Onchain rails are turning communities into coordination networks.
Media is no longer just attention, it is real distribution, trust, and demand.
So we’re evolving.
ShipGuild is a builder guild for the agentic era.
A place for creators, founders, and operators who want to use AI agents, blockchain rails, media, and community to build real products, grow audiences, launch experiments, and turn small teams into leverage machines.
The SHIP token becomes the membership and coordination layer behind the guild. Not a promise, but a practical experiment in what happens when builders, agents, tools, content, and ownership all point in the same direction.
Web3 Matters was the beginning.
ShipGuild is the operating system we’re building next.
I’m very excited about this next stage!
This is the bet behind ShipGuild:
AI agents are going to turn small teams into operating networks.
The teams that thrive in this new environment won’t just be the ones with the best prompts or the most tokens.
They’ll be the ones that know how to combine agents, media, community, and onchain coordination into repeatable systems.
That’s what we’re building toward. 🫡
Let's be honest about what on-chain data is showing right now.
ETF outflows: happening
Whales: selling
Retail: buying the dip
The people who matter, the ones who actually move markets, are pulling out.
Retail buying doesn't save it. It never has.
What's your plan for this dip?
This is not a minor issue.
Today, there’s a huge gap between people using basic LLM interfaces and people actually using agents.
But even among agent users, the gap is massive.
If you know how to orchestrate agents properly, you can basically run entire business departments with a much smaller team.
The catch is that most people don’t know this is possible, and even fewer know where to start.
Social media doesn’t help much either. Scrolling through fake gurus and “100x productivity” setups is mostly a waste of time.
There’s a massive opportunity to build a real solution around this.
Great article on one of the hottest topics in AI right now.
TL;DR:
The big shift in AI coding is moving from prompting agents directly to designing loops that manage them.
A loop is a small program that gives the agent a task, reads the result, checks what happened, decides the next step, and repeats until the job is done.
The key is feedback. Without verification, agents can produce confident mistakes, waste tokens, and keep moving in the wrong direction.
At scale, the loop becomes more important than the model itself.
Good systems limit iterations, detect when no progress is being made, and turn repeated workflows into reusable skills.
Three things AI agents will change for you:
Research. Building. Distribution.
Our co-founder Quantic (PhD), runs agents daily... breaks down exactly how he uses each one.
The honest take on content: "I don't fully trust what it creates yet. But it fixes my grammar, improves my flow, and gives me ideas."
That's the right way to use it.
Agent living on your computer > ChatGPT tab.
If you've found Web3 Matters recently and aren't sure where to start, here's the ecosystem map:
→ ShipGuild
Research, reports, resources, and deeper ecosystem context: https://t.co/ZwmDTBRZZU
→ ShipGuard
Repository, supply-chain, and Web3 security readiness insights: https://t.co/xQr6UyfN5P
→ Growth Bytes
Our newsletter covering AI, crypto, security, and digital infrastructure: https://t.co/Fygw0bALw9
→ YouTube
Livestreams, interviews, product demos, and long-form discussions: https://t.co/piL4lPIhjH
→ TikTok
Short-form explainers, clips, and ecosystem updates: https://t.co/J3HyQGoi02
Most of what we do revolves around a simple idea:
Help people get closer to the work than the headlines.
The future is higher-level agent control flows.
You build a tiny loop that feeds the AI its goal plus full history, asks it for the single next action, runs whatever it says, updates the history with the result, and repeats until the goal is done.
The people who seem to get the most out of crypto aren't necessarily the smartest.
They're usually the people closest to what's being built.
They see the discussions early.
They read the reports.
They test the products.
They talk to the builders.
They have context.
That's a big part of why we're building ShipGuild.
Not to create another app.
To make it easier for people to stay connected to the work happening inside the ecosystem.
Explore: https://t.co/ZwmDTBRZZU