Amadeus: Web3 Agent Store

- Amadeus Protocol positioned itself as an 'App Store for Web3 agents' offering specialized AI for trading and DeFi automation. - The protocol claims agents will include verifiable logic for investing, trading, and automated protocol interactions. - That framework aims to make composable agent marketplaces a layer of Web3 automation infrastructure (x.com).

Amadeus Protocol is pitching a marketplace for blockchain-based AI agents, with tools for trading, investing and decentralized finance automation built into its network. (ama.one) The project’s website says users can discover specialized agents, replay an agent’s behavior with the same inputs, and run execution inside Trusted Execution Environments, a hardware-based way to keep data private while code runs. (ama.one) Its documentation describes Amadeus as a Layer 1 blockchain built to create, deploy and monetize AI agents, and says Nova AI can turn plain-language prompts into “verified, test-driven code” without requiring users to write smart contracts. (docs.ama.one) In plain terms, the pitch is that an agent works like an automated software worker, and the store works like a catalog where users pick one for a job such as placing trades or moving funds across protocols. Amadeus says those agents can keep memory on-chain and execute with deterministic logic, meaning the same input should produce the same output every time. (ama.one; docs.ama.one) That matters in crypto because automated trading and protocol interactions usually run through bots, scripts or off-chain services that users cannot easily inspect after the fact. Amadeus says recording updates on-chain and making behavior replayable would make those systems auditable in a way typical black-box bots are not. (ama.one) The company has been filling in developer plumbing around that pitch. Its software development kit docs say developers can build transactions, query blockchain data, manage wallets and interact with contracts through an official TypeScript and JavaScript package. (docs.ama.one) Amadeus is also tying the marketplace idea to its underlying chain design. Validator docs say the network uses “Useful Proof of Work,” where validators perform matrix computations meant to support AI workloads instead of conventional hash calculations. (docs.ama.one) The project expanded its trading-agent push on Feb. 4, 2026, when it said it acquired Bitte.ai for $1.7 million paid in $AMA. In that announcement, Amadeus said Bitte brought 24,164 unique users, more than 2.85 million messages, 344,000 chats and 16,703 registered agents. (markets.financialcontent.com) That acquisition also showed where Amadeus expects demand to come from first: exchanges, prediction markets, decentralized exchanges and other on-chain venues where users already rely on automation. The company said Bitte’s connectors would be integrated as venue adapters and rebuilt as protocol-native agents on Amadeus. (markets.financialcontent.com) Amadeus also includes caveats alongside the pitch. Its docs call the protocol experimental, say features and use cases may change or never be implemented, and say references to monetization and fees are hypothetical examples rather than guarantees. (docs.ama.one) For now, the clearest fact is the product position: Amadeus wants Web3 automation to look less like custom bot code and more like an app store, with agents users can choose, audit and run on-chain. (ama.one; docs.ama.one)

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