To be honest, at first I was just keeping it for novelty, until recently when this set of gameplay started working, it felt completely different — it is no longer a toy, but a 'little employee' that can find work, do the job, and settle accounts on its own.


The core change can be summed up in one sentence: it has shifted from you operating it to it making money by itself.


Let's first talk about the most intuitive closed loop:


After you configure the lobster OpenClaw, it will go to Loudy to take tasks by itself, without you having to watch over it.

Once it receives a task, it will directly call on-chain data, generate content, and then send it to Binance Square.

Task completed, earnings are automatically settled and sent back to your wallet.


What are you doing over there? Drinking coffee, watching it work.


The key to why this can work lies not in the 'lobster,' but in the underlying data layer upgrade.


—Chainbase's positioning has changed this time.


In the past, it was more like a data tool for developers; now it has directly changed to a more aggressive role:

Crypto Data Database for AI Agents


The focus is not on 'for people to use,' but rather 'for Agents to use.'


What does that mean?


Currently, these AI Agents, like your lobster, actually have a bigger problem: it's not that they 'can't speak,' but that they can't understand the real world.


On-chain data is complex, fragmented, and needs to be real-time—

If the data is inaccurate, no matter how smart the AI is, it can only spout nonsense.


What Chainbase does is very straightforward:

It organizes real-time data from over 90 chains into structured information that AI can directly call, understand, and even query in natural language.


Simply put:

It has equipped your lobster with a pair of 'eyes that can see the on-chain world,' and it's real-time.


A key point is—it's Agent Native.


In other words, these calls, queries, and even payments can all be completed by the AI itself.

No need for human clicks, no need for human confirmation, the machine closes the loop itself.


This directly explains why it can now appear:


Things like 'the lobster takes orders → works on its own → collects money on its own.'


Let's talk about something that everyone is more concerned about — $C.


The market has actually been voting with money.


In the last 15 days, $C despite an overall unfriendly environment, there has been a noticeable counter-trend in the market, and the fundamental reason is not complicated:


It has started to be 'used.'


Every time an Agent calls data and executes tasks, it essentially consumes underlying resources.

As more and more lobsters and Agents start running, this consumption is no longer a narrative but a continuously occurring demand.


It's not about telling stories to drive the market, but rather 'someone is using it.'


Let me be honest:


If you are still treating OpenClaw as just a cyber pet, then it is indeed a bit of a waste.


The truly interesting part of this wave is not 'raising lobsters,' but rather—

You now have an Agent that can run on-chain for you 24 hours a day and can also monetize itself.


In the past, you made money by monitoring the market.

Now it runs for you, and you just collect.


The difference in this is quite significant. $C @Chainbase Official