How to Build a Potential AI Agent Project in a Bear Market?
Original Title: The AI Agent Playbook for Builders
Original Author: Defi0xJeff, Founder of steak studio
Original Translation: zhouzhou, BlockBeats
Editor's Note: This article discusses the correct way to build a crypto AI agent, emphasizing that the agent should complement the core product by changing the user journey to enhance product value, rather than relying solely on the token. Entrepreneurs should focus on solving real-world problems, building a sustainable core product, and then using agents and tokens for promotion and monetization.
The following is the original content (slightly reorganized for easier comprehension):
The market has experienced multiple pullbacks, with liquidity gradually becoming scarcer. Recently launched successful new agents have a maximum market cap of around $10 million.
By "successful," I mean the product has achieved Product-Market Fit (PMF), provided value to actual users, and has started (or is about to start) generating revenue. This is very different from three to four months ago when agents with PMF could have market caps exceeding $1 billion, especially if they positioned themselves as agent+framework/launchpad tokens. For example, AVA as a 3D agent not only serves as an agent itself but also derives value from the launchpad and supported projects through its sensory layer.
Old Playbook: Agent as Framework
The previous approach was to launch an agent to showcase its capabilities, attract developers looking to build their own agents, and require these developers to hold/burn/pay agent tokens to access the framework. The issue was that the crypto community assigned too high a premium to framework tokens, and these "framework agents" often lacked differentiation. In many cases, they did not even have a product—they were just talking on Twitter, hoping for token price appreciation.
The first version of agents treated the conversational agent itself as a product, which is unique in the crypto space as we value community building more—similar to founder-led marketing (founders gaining attention through constant chatter). Having agents constantly chatter for your project to increase visibility seemed like a good idea—it worked well when first launched in November 2024, lasting a month. But now, with 420,690 agents constantly chattering, most agents seem immature, repetitive, and frankly annoying.
Playbook: Agent as a Business
Here is how you should think about launching an agent — launching an agent means you will be operating a startup while managing up to three products:
1. Core Product (Real Business)
Your core product should solve a real-world problem. It should not just be a conversational agent but a true product.
Example:
· Improve sports betting odds prediction models to help users win more in sports betting (e.g., crypto community AskBillyBets).
· Develop a crypto asset prediction model that enables better trading, minimizes impermanent loss, and maximizes liquidity provider returns (e.g., crypto communities Cod3xOrg, gizatechxyz, and Almanak).
· Aggregate insights from top alpha sources (such as Cookie, Kaito, Nansen, Messari, Aixbt, CG, Dexscreener, and Bubblemaps) into an AI agent research search engine to aid investment decisions (currently, no team is solving this problem — we need an AI agent like Perplexity).
The core product should be the top priority before any team launches a token. You need to ensure there is actual demand in the market and users are willing to pay for it. Otherwise, you will fall into the "crypto valley," the consequences of which may be more severe than traditional startups:
· High operational costs.
· Token-funded customer acquisition costs (CAC).
· Token price crash → Reputation collapse → No one cares about your project.
If your token crashes, it becomes a curse. Most people won't care about your project regardless of how strong your core product is or how much progress you've made.
Instead of relying on token incentives, focus on attracting customers through your product. Find a balance between growth and revenue-generating business models.
The playbook of the crypto community KaitoAI is a good case study:
· They built an enterprise product — a crypto search engine focused on social/emotion/narrative and charged users, projects, and the ecosystem, providing real value.
· They launched the Mindshare Dashboard, becoming the standard for tracking narratives and trends.
· They intensified their efforts by introducing the Yapper Leaderboard, allowing KOLs to spontaneously share it as a status symbol.
· They further rolled out NFT WL and KAITO airdrop, incentivizing Twitter engagement through actual rewards.
This approach is not easy to replicate, but the lesson is: first find PMF, generate revenue, get people excited before launching the token. Once you have attention (hype) and revenue, you can move to the next level.
Similarly, communication is crucial. Many projects have strong products but poor communication skills. If no one knows what you are doing, no one will care.
2. Token (Alignment Tool)
We have transitioned from "VC coins" to "fair launch," celebrating tokens with high circulation and low FDV. But fair launch is not entirely fair—every token strategy has its trade-offs.
If the token you launch has a high circulation and low FDV structure, you will not be able to raise funds from VCs and angels (because of undervaluation). However, you can use the token as a marketing tool to kickstart ideation sharing.
Many teams will launch two types of tokens:
· Protocol Token → Kickstarts Ideation Sharing.
· Ecosystem Token → Raises funding from VCs and angels at a higher valuation.
But this creates an expectation mismatch—communities expect airdrops, and when the ecosystem token is released, capital moves from the protocol token to the ecosystem token, leading to a collapse in the protocol token price. Managing the core product + protocol token + ecosystem token while ensuring value accrual for each token is very complex.
In an ideal world, there should be a token that accumulates all the value from the core product. Historically, projects that could generate revenue and funnel it back into the token (through buybacks or revenue distribution) have been able to survive long-term.
Tokens should complement the core product, not be a necessity. To delve deeper into protocol token strategy, please refer to the crypto community VaderResearch's analysis of the protocol token playbook for the crypto community at virtuals io.

3. Agent (Supplementary Product)
「Agent」 refers to conversational agents built using frameworks like ElizaOS, G.A.M.E, ARC, Pippin, etc. While these agents integrate on-chain/off-chain capabilities, they should be supplementary products to the core product.
Agents should enhance the value of the core product by altering the user's path:
Instead of having users actively seek out and use your product, let the agent bring the product to them.
This could mean:
· Showcasing the product directly on Twitter through text/video.
· Having the agent act as an AI companion, changing the user's interaction style (similar to ChatGPT's abstraction).
· Using the agent as the interface itself, executing tasks in the background.
Of course, there are exceptions. An example is the aixbt agent—it provides real-time social and sentiment analysis from Twitter, allowing users to access real-time Alpha signals ahead of others. Aixbt, by consistently providing Alpha, showcases the terminal's capability and has become the No. 1 KOL in CT. In this case, the agent itself is the product.
However, this model is extremely challenging to replicate. Most projects should focus on strengthening the core product first.
A successful product-first case study is cookiedotfun:
· Starting with a free AI agent dashboard to attract users.
· Transitioning to a freemium model by locking COOKIES to unlock advanced insights.
· Monetizing through providing API for projects and agents.
· Launching agentcookiefun to directly bring insights to Twitter.
Summary
In 2020-21, launching a token required mastering Solidity. But now platforms like pumpdotfun make it easy to tokenize anything.
This shift in mindset—people no longer focusing on building real products but directly launching tokens—is a "garbage in, garbage out" approach, leading capital to quickly move to the next "garbage." We need to change this.
To build sustainable projects, agent projects should be treated as startups. Instead of seeking funding between CT, VCs, and angel investors, it's better to build projects with long-term value—not for the next 6 months but for the next 6 years.
Innovation, solving real-world problems, building real businesses — not just creating the next speculative meme coin farm.
The future of the crypto AI agent depends on this.
You may also like

CFTC Reportedly Plans New Prediction Market Rules Focused on Manipulation Risk and Public Interest Review
The CFTC is reportedly preparing new prediction market rules focused on manipulation risk, public interest review, and retail trader protections.

Meet the new WEEX trial fund—your gateway to greater profits

WEEX Labs Lands at Dutch Blockchain Week: A Disruptive Crypto × AI Conversation Sets Sail in Amsterdam

SK Hynix Reportedly Plans U.S. ADR Listing as Early as August, With SEC Approval Possible in Late June
SK Hynix may pursue a U.S. ADR listing as early as August, with SEC approval reportedly possible in late June amid strong AI chip supply chain demand.

SpaceX vs Tesla vs xAI: Which Elon Musk Trade Has the Biggest Upside in 2026?

OpenAI Reveals It Has Confidentially Submitted an S-1 to the SEC, Keeping the Door Open for a Future IPO
On June 9, according to an OpenAI announcement, the company recently confidentially submitted a draft S-1 registration statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), beginning the preliminary compliance process for a potential initial public offering. OpenAI said it chose to disclose this proactively because it expected the news might leak; however, the company has not yet set a specific listing timeline, and related arrangements may still take some time.

Latest research from 13 top universities including Cornell University: The current state, challenges, and misconceptions of the fusion of Crypto and AI

Deconstructing Anthropic: The Best AI Company, Possibly Also a Type of Organizational Invention

Apollo and Blackstone Reportedly Back $35 Billion Anthropic Chip Financing as Deal Details Remain Unclear
On June 9, according to currently available news alerts, Apollo and Blackstone Group participated in a $35 billion financing for an Anthropic “chip project.” Based on the original wording of the report, the funding has already been raised, but public information remains limited. The financing structure, use of proceeds, project entity, and whether Apollo and Blackstone participated through equity, debt, or project financing have not yet been disclosed.

Humanity Protocol Security Incident Escalates: More Than $31 Million Stolen From Related Addresses as Attacker Continues Selling H for ETH
On June 9, according to monitoring by Onchain Lens, more than $31 million has been stolen from addresses linked to Humanity Protocol, and the attack is still ongoing, with the hacker continuously swapping H tokens for ETH. Project founder Terence Kwok later confirmed the security incident on X, saying the issue involved a private key leak.

Bloomberg: As Bitcoin Weakens, Stablecoins and RWA Continue to Drive Expansion in Crypto Businesses
In June, Bloomberg reported that despite Bitcoin falling below $60,000 last week, wiping out about $235 billion in market value within seven days, and dropping close to 50% from last year’s peak, some core businesses in the crypto industry are still expanding, mainly in stablecoins, real-world asset tokenization (RWA), payments, and infrastructure. The report also noted that overall altcoin activity has contracted significantly: altcoin market capitalization has fallen from a peak of about $431 billion in November 2021 to around $170 billion, and among the tens of millions of tokens issued in recent years, fewer than 1,700 still maintain meaningful trading activity.

Galaxy Deep Research Report: How Hyperliquid's HIP-4 Upgrade Changes the Landscape of Prediction Markets?

Binance Research: RWA Market Expected to Expand Nearly 6x from Early 2025, with Public Equities and Onchain Payments Heating Up Together
In June, Binance Research said in its monthly market report that the real-world asset (RWA) market is expected to grow by about 589% from the beginning of 2025. Bond- and money market fund-related RWA expanded by about $6.5 billion, up 83% year over year, while publicly traded equity RWAs grew by about 422%. The report also noted that monthly crypto debit card transaction volume exceeded $747 million in May, up 48.6% year to date.

Japan to Assess a Framework for Yen Stablecoins and Crypto ETFs as Asia’s Compliant Payments Narrative Heats Up
Recently, according to the original report, Japan is considering the launch of yen stablecoins and cryptocurrency ETFs. Public information remains limited at this stage, and there is still no complete policy text, regulatory draft, or clear implementation timeline, so this is better characterized as a “policy discussion” rather than formal implementation. The original wording also noted that advancing stablecoin regulation in Asia is driving XRP usage and supporting growth in the XRPL ecosystem. However, based on currently available public information, there is not enough evidence to directly establish a clear causal relationship between this round of discussion in Japan and XRP or XRPL.

ZachXBT: Humanity private key leak and abnormal surge in H token should be viewed separately
On June 9, according to related disclosures, on-chain investigator ZachXBT posted an update on Humanity’s roughly $31 million security incident, saying that after further analyzing fund flows, he currently tends to believe the project team was not involved in an “inside job” or a self-staged attack. According to him, the official explanation about the private key leak was broadly accurate, but before the token unlock, the price of H had been artificially pushed higher, and the hacker later took advantage of that market environment; therefore, the private key leak and the earlier abnormal price pumping should be regarded as two separate and independent events. This reframing has shifted the market’s understanding of the nature of the incident. Earlier discussion around Humanity had focused on whether the team directly participated in the attack or used the security incident to cover up internal operations. ZachXBT’s latest remarks shift the focus from “whether it was self-theft” to “whether there were pre-unlock market structure issues.” He also questioned whether the team may have.

Morning Report | OpenAI has submitted an S-1 registration statement draft to the U.S. SEC; Morpho completes $175 million financing

Morning Report | BitMine increased its holdings by 126,971 ETH last week; trader Eugene announced his exit from the crypto market

Wang Chuan: How can one not feel anxious after the neighbor Old Wang made thirty times profit by investing in storage stocks? (Seven) - A quarter-century cycle
CFTC Reportedly Plans New Prediction Market Rules Focused on Manipulation Risk and Public Interest Review
The CFTC is reportedly preparing new prediction market rules focused on manipulation risk, public interest review, and retail trader protections.
Meet the new WEEX trial fund—your gateway to greater profits
WEEX Labs Lands at Dutch Blockchain Week: A Disruptive Crypto × AI Conversation Sets Sail in Amsterdam
SK Hynix Reportedly Plans U.S. ADR Listing as Early as August, With SEC Approval Possible in Late June
SK Hynix may pursue a U.S. ADR listing as early as August, with SEC approval reportedly possible in late June amid strong AI chip supply chain demand.
SpaceX vs Tesla vs xAI: Which Elon Musk Trade Has the Biggest Upside in 2026?
OpenAI Reveals It Has Confidentially Submitted an S-1 to the SEC, Keeping the Door Open for a Future IPO
On June 9, according to an OpenAI announcement, the company recently confidentially submitted a draft S-1 registration statement to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), beginning the preliminary compliance process for a potential initial public offering. OpenAI said it chose to disclose this proactively because it expected the news might leak; however, the company has not yet set a specific listing timeline, and related arrangements may still take some time.





