@Vanarchain (VANRY) is a gaming metaverse with a product ecosystem.
PayFi AI agents face challenges in getting people to use them, making partnerships, finding long-term use cases, and collecting data metrics.
Last week, I tried to get an AI agent to handle a multi-step PayFi transaction, but it forgot what was going on halfway through, so I had to restart and use more gas. It was a frustrating coordination glitch. #Vanar is like a shared notebook for a group project; it keeps everyone on the same page without having to keep going over things.
It puts a lot of emphasis on putting AI reasoning directly on the blockchain, giving up some off-chain flexibility in exchange for logic that can be verified under load.
This limits developers to EVM tools, but it does not rely on oracles and puts reliability over speed.
$VANRY It pays transaction fees, stakes for network security and validator rewards, and allows users to vote on protocol parameters, such as changes to the AI layer.
The recent launch of MyNeutron adds decentralized AI memory that compresses data 500:1 for portable context. Early adoption shows that 30,000+ gamers are using it in Dypians integration, but TVL is only about $1 million, which indicates that there are liquidity issues in the crowded L1 space.
I am not sure about how quickly the metaverse can grow. Partnerships like NVIDIA help, but the real problems are getting developers on board and making sure agents are reliable in unstable markets. If usage grows beyond the current 8 million in daily volume, it could eventually support more adaptive gaming and PayFi applications. For builders, the real question is how integration costs stack up against pushing more logic directly onto the blockchain.