MultiversX Opens Door to Agentic Commerce With New Agent Hub and Gasless On-Chain Tooling

BlockChainReporter
EGLD1,15%
ACP-25,35%
CODEX-0,02%
MAX-0,32%

MultiversX today unveiled what it calls the Agent Hub, a developer portal designed to make AI coding agents first-class citizens of its blockchain ecosystem. The move, teased in a tweet by co-founder Beniamin Mincu, “We Are Setting Agents Free On MultiversX, Introducing Agentic Builder Hub, Game On,” is less a single product launch than the public face of a year-long effort to turn autonomous agents into reliable on-chain actors.

For years, the promise of AI-assisted development has been the same: speed up delivery by having models write or orchestrate code. What MultiversX argues is that the gap between capability and discoverability is changing now. Agents already exist that can generate smart contracts or call APIs, but wiring them safely into a blockchain stack, choosing the right network, avoiding deprecated calls, handling denominations and gas, still requires human hand-holding. The Agent Hub packages the context agents needed in machine-readable form so they “produce correct onchain code from the first prompt, not the fifth.”

The portal is straightforward in ambition but deep under the hood. It offers machine-readable discovery so agents can find SDKs, workflows and networks without manual configuration. It embeds behavioral guardrails into the documentation layer to prevent common mistakes, supplies starter prompts to collapse onboarding, and plugs in multiple agent runtimes. The site calls out compatibility with Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf and Codex, so builders can work through whichever agent they prefer. MultiversX is careful to note this does not replace the hands-on Builders Hub; instead, it complements it by serving the agents those builders now rely on.

Beyond convenience, the Agent Hub is the visible doorway to a larger stack MultiversX has been shipping: a suite of protocols and standards that together enable agentic commerce. That stack includes MX-8004, an on-chain identity and interaction standard; UCP, a unified agent-to-agent discovery protocol; ACP/AP2 commerce protocols for negotiation, payment and task execution; x402, HTTP-native micropayments; and a MultiversX MCP server exposing 14 blockchain interaction tools directly to agents. Perhaps most notable for end users, MultiversX’s Relayed v3 delivers gasless transactions so neither agents nor their users need to hold EGLD to get started.

The Strategy is Obvious

They aim to stitch identity, discovery, negotiation and settlement into a single, discoverable developer experience so agents can autonomously transact, negotiate and settle value onchain. MultiversX’s blog posts and technical notes make the commercial case explicit as they foresee economies where agents autonomously schedule services, reconcile invoices, buy data, and even manage inventory, all with minimal human intervention.

The company argues the remaining bottleneck wasn’t technology but the ability for agents to find and correctly use the available tools from within the workspaces developers already use. Practically, this means a developer can sketch a requirement in Cursor or another agent-enabled IDE and have an agent generate and deploy a compliant smart contract, call the right APIs, and handle micropayments, without the developer diving back into pages of docs.

For builders experimenting with autonomous agent economies, the Agent Hub aims to reduce friction from hours of documentation to a single, guided interaction. Early demonstrations, including a live “Max” agent, are already showcasing how discovery through UCP, delegated authority through AP2, execution via ACP and settlement through x402 can chain into a single agent workflow.

Critics will ask about security, governance and how much human oversight remains appropriate. MultiversX’s approach appears to be defensive: put constraints and machine-readable rules where agents can see them, and build primitives that make safe defaults the path of least resistance. Whether that will satisfy cautious developers and regulators will depend on real-world deployments and audits, but the release signals that MultiversX intends to be a major testbed for agentic commerce. For curious builders, the door is open: Explore the Agent Hub here and experience it firsthand.

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