Lately, I’ve been genuinely anxious beyond words. Everywhere I scroll, I see OpenClaw’s AI agents competing. I couldn’t resist the urge to try it out myself. And once I started playing, I got completely hooked! As long as you tune the prompts and logic properly, it becomes your 24/7 automatic partner: crunching data, writing code, even social chatting—fully automated and self-competitive. I’ve been experimenting slowly, and in the process, I rediscovered that long-lost sense of control and pure joy. A few days ago, I heard that GOAT Network is officially embracing AI agents, creating a hardcore combination of AI agents + Bitcoin. I was so excited I couldn’t sleep. As a GOAT Ambassador, I’m damn too hyped about this. I checked out GOAT’s focus on this agent-specific track for Bitcoin L2: making execution blazing fast, settling with ironclad certainty, and leaving a safe backdoor for exit at any time. It’s no longer about “more features equals more awesome,” but about racing to: - Achieve fast deterministic settlement - Operate reliably 24/7 - Low barriers, minimal permissions - Micro-payments for casual use - Minimize trust dependencies That’s also why I’m increasingly obsessed with BTC. Once agents start managing their own funds and building pools, their biggest fears aren’t lack of tools but getting scammed, being manipulated, or projects running away overnight. They don’t want flashy DeFi playgrounds—they want the most hardcore, least trust-dependent final settlement layer. BTC’s role is actually super simple and straightforward: it’s not the execution layer; it’s the ultimate security layer and value anchor. The entire structure should be layered like this: - L1 (BTC) responsible for safety net + value anchoring - L2 responsible for high-frequency execution + computational scaling This isn’t some lofty narrative; it’s the most natural logical layering. Whoever executes, wins; whoever settles, stays stable. Within this framework, I suddenly see GOAT’s approach as spot-on. BitVM2 + zkRollup is a very practical path: executing mostly off-chain for maximum efficiency; state verifiable and challengeable; always able to revert back to BTC for safety; ultimate security forever tied to Bitcoin. When agents become new productivity units (earning, spending, forming teams), we’re not short of fancy features. What we need are: - Verifiable execution (don’t tell me what you did, I need to verify clearly) - Exit mechanisms (able to run back to BTC anytime) - Immutable final settlement (unchangeable bottom line) So, BTC here is more like the “central bank settlement system” for agents, not some app supermarket. It’s not responsible for playing with you daily; it’s there to safeguard your funds when you’re tired or things go wrong—that’s the real foundation needed in the agent era. The more I think about it, the more I believe GOAT is doing the right thing. It’s not about competing to tell the best story, but honestly filling in the missing pieces that agents need most. Brothers, the competition in the chain isn’t about who can spin the best stories anymore; it’s about who can build a “fast, unlosable, always-withdrawable” home for the machines first. 🚀
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The recent reflections of the GOAT Ambassador:
Lately, I’ve been genuinely anxious beyond words. Everywhere I scroll, I see OpenClaw’s AI agents competing. I couldn’t resist the urge to try it out myself. And once I started playing, I got completely hooked! As long as you tune the prompts and logic properly, it becomes your 24/7 automatic partner: crunching data, writing code, even social chatting—fully automated and self-competitive. I’ve been experimenting slowly, and in the process, I rediscovered that long-lost sense of control and pure joy.
A few days ago, I heard that GOAT Network is officially embracing AI agents, creating a hardcore combination of AI agents + Bitcoin. I was so excited I couldn’t sleep. As a GOAT Ambassador, I’m damn too hyped about this.
I checked out GOAT’s focus on this agent-specific track for Bitcoin L2: making execution blazing fast, settling with ironclad certainty, and leaving a safe backdoor for exit at any time.
It’s no longer about “more features equals more awesome,” but about racing to:
- Achieve fast deterministic settlement
- Operate reliably 24/7
- Low barriers, minimal permissions
- Micro-payments for casual use
- Minimize trust dependencies
That’s also why I’m increasingly obsessed with BTC. Once agents start managing their own funds and building pools, their biggest fears aren’t lack of tools but getting scammed, being manipulated, or projects running away overnight. They don’t want flashy DeFi playgrounds—they want the most hardcore, least trust-dependent final settlement layer.
BTC’s role is actually super simple and straightforward: it’s not the execution layer; it’s the ultimate security layer and value anchor. The entire structure should be layered like this:
- L1 (BTC) responsible for safety net + value anchoring
- L2 responsible for high-frequency execution + computational scaling
This isn’t some lofty narrative; it’s the most natural logical layering. Whoever executes, wins; whoever settles, stays stable.
Within this framework, I suddenly see GOAT’s approach as spot-on. BitVM2 + zkRollup is a very practical path: executing mostly off-chain for maximum efficiency; state verifiable and challengeable; always able to revert back to BTC for safety; ultimate security forever tied to Bitcoin.
When agents become new productivity units (earning, spending, forming teams), we’re not short of fancy features. What we need are:
- Verifiable execution (don’t tell me what you did, I need to verify clearly)
- Exit mechanisms (able to run back to BTC anytime)
- Immutable final settlement (unchangeable bottom line)
So, BTC here is more like the “central bank settlement system” for agents, not some app supermarket. It’s not responsible for playing with you daily; it’s there to safeguard your funds when you’re tired or things go wrong—that’s the real foundation needed in the agent era.
The more I think about it, the more I believe GOAT is doing the right thing. It’s not about competing to tell the best story, but honestly filling in the missing pieces that agents need most.
Brothers, the competition in the chain isn’t about who can spin the best stories anymore; it’s about who can build a “fast, unlosable, always-withdrawable” home for the machines first. 🚀