MultiversX today announced something called Agent Hub, a developer portal designed to make AI coding agents first-class residents of the blockchain ecosystem. The move, teased by co-founder Veniamin Mink in a tweet, “MultiversX makes agents free, introduces Agent Builder Hub, and introduces Game On,” is less a single product launch and represents a year-long effort to turn autonomous agents into trusted on-chain actors.
The promise of AI-assisted development has been the same for years: speed delivery by letting models write or orchestrate code. What MultiversX argues is that the gap between functionality and discoverability is now changing. Although agents that can generate smart contracts and call APIs already exist, a human touch is still needed to securely connect the agent to the blockchain stack, choose the right network, avoid deprecated calls, and handle amounts and gas. Agent Hub packages the necessary context agents in a machine-readable format to “generate the correct on-chain code from the first prompt instead of the fifth prompt.”
Portal’s ambitions are simple, but deep within. It provides machine-readable discovery, so agents can discover SDKs, workflows, and networks without manual configuration. Embed behavioral guardrails in the documentation layer to prevent common mistakes, provide starter prompts for collapsing onboarding, and plug in multiple agent runtimes. The site claims compatibility with Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, and Codex, so builders can work with their preferred agent. MultiversX should note that this is not a replacement for the hands-on Builders Hub. Instead, it complements it by providing services to the agents that builders currently rely on.
Beyond convenience, Agent Hub is a visible gateway to the larger stack that MultirsX has been shipping: a set of protocols and standards that enable agent commerce. This stack includes MX-8004, an on-chain identity and interaction standard. UCP, Unified Agent-to-Agent Discovery Protocol. ACP/AP2 commerce protocol for negotiation, payments, and task execution. x402, HTTP native micropayments. and MultiversX MCP Server, which exposes 14 blockchain interaction tools directly to agents. Perhaps most notable for end users is that MultiversX’s Relayed v3 provides gasless transactions, so neither agents nor users need to hold EGLD to initiate.
The strategy is clear
They aim to stitch together identity, discovery, negotiation, and settlement into a single discoverable developer experience, allowing agents to autonomously trade, negotiate, and settle value on-chain. MultiversX’s blog posts and technical notes make a clear commercial case, predicting an economy in which agents autonomously schedule services, reconcile invoices, purchase data, and even manage inventory, all with minimal human intervention.
The company argues that the remaining bottleneck is not the technology, but the ability of agents to discover and properly use the tools available within the workspaces developers are already using. In practice, this means that developers can sketch their requirements in Cursor or another agent-enabled IDE, generate and deploy agent-compliant smart contracts, call the appropriate APIs, and process micropayments without having to return to the documentation page.
For builders experimenting with an autonomous agent economy, Agent Hub aims to reduce friction from hours of documentation to a single guided interaction. An early demo with a live “Max” agent already shows how discovery with UCP, delegation of authority with AP2, execution with ACP, and settlement with x402 can be chained into a single agent workflow.
Critics will question the extent to which security, governance, and human oversight are adequate. 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 it satisfies cautious developers and regulators will depend on actual deployment and audits, but this release signals that MultirsX is intended to be a major testbed for agent commerce. The door is open for curious builders. Explore Agent Hub here and experience it first hand.

