Web3 platform adds wallet capabilities to chat agents
Pieverse, a Web3 platform focused on AI conversational agents, has announced a partnership with Bitget Wallet. The collaboration brings Bitget Wallet’s functionality directly into Pieverse’s Purr-Fect Claw agents. This means users can now execute DeFi operations through natural language conversations in messaging apps.
I think this is interesting because it removes some of the technical barriers that keep people from using decentralized finance. Instead of navigating multiple apps and interfaces, users can simply tell their agent what they want to do. The platform supports popular messaging services like Telegram, WhatsApp, Kakao, and Line.
Gasless execution across multiple chains
The integration enables what Pieverse calls “gasless routing and execution” across more than fifty decentralized exchanges. This is powered by Bitget Wallet’s multi-chain infrastructure. Users can perform swaps, manage portfolios, and execute bridges without worrying about gas fees upfront.
What’s perhaps most useful is the cross-chain functionality. The agents can handle transactions across BNB Chain, Arbitrum, Base, Solana, and Ethereum. The system automatically finds optimal routing paths and manages the complex logic involved in cross-chain transfers. Users just describe what they want in plain language.
Security and execution transparency
Security appears to be a central focus of this integration. The Purr-Fect Claw agents operate within Trusted Execution Environments, which provide keyless wallet security. This approach keeps user assets protected while allowing conversational access.
The platform also uses ERC-8004 standards for portable identity and verifiable execution trails. Every transaction leaves an audit trail, which adds accountability to the process. This might help address some of the trust concerns people have with automated trading systems.
Practical applications in daily use
Right now, the bridges and cross-chain swaps are available directly in chat interfaces. The agents can detect live quotes, identify the most efficient paths, and prepare transfers for user confirmation. Portfolio management has become more intuitive too.
Instead of switching between multiple tabs and applications, users can ask their agent to show them the best trading opportunities. The system surfaces market data and ranks opportunities in real time. It also checks security and liquidity metrics before suggesting actions.
This partnership seems to be trying to make DeFi more accessible to regular users who might find current interfaces intimidating. By putting everything in a conversational format, it lowers the technical knowledge required to participate in decentralized finance. Whether this approach will gain widespread adoption remains to be seen, but it certainly represents an interesting direction for the space.
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