I have some news to share. Prompt-to-DeFi is only 7 days away from official launch, and the first full demo is about to be released. I've been following this direction for a while, and the closer it gets, the more I want to see whether it will actually work.
After playing in the DeFi space for a long time, a consensus easily forms: truly building a decent strategy is never easy. Code, data, testing, parameter tuning—nothing can be skipped; often you spend half a day just to get to the starting line. For most ordinary users, this barrier alone is enough to deter them.
So when I saw @Infinit_Labs working on Prompt-to-DeFi, my first reaction wasn't excitement but wondering if they were just “repackaging the process in a different way.” However, after following along, at least in direction, what they are doing differs from many so‑called automation tools.
It doesn’t simply add a few extra buttons; it tries to abstract the layer of ability that traditionally belongs to professional players. Without writing code, you just state your requirements in everyday language, and the subsequent decomposition, composition, and execution framework are handled by an AI agent, forming a complete path from idea to on‑chain execution, not stopping at a demo or concept stage.
Another aspect that concerns me is its insistence on being non‑custodial. Assets stay in your own hands; the execution logic is inspectable, previewable, and verifiable, rather than a black‑box “run and see the result” model. In today’s environment, this design at least shows the team knows where the risks lie and what users truly worry about.
From a more practical perspective, for those who wish to output strategies long‑term rather than just participate once, getting familiar with this system early actually builds a reusable strategy experience. When the future revenue‑sharing mechanism truly launches, the ability to seize the opportunity often hinges on whether you were already in position.
The reservation channel is still open, but slots are becoming limited. Being an early tester means more than just “trying it out first”; it allows you to fully engage with the features, templates, and creator tools, providing concrete help in understanding the whole ecosystem.
My thought is simple: I’m not rushing to a conclusion, but it’s at least worth seeing with my own eyes how much the DeFi barrier can be lowered. Many things only reveal whether the direction is right once they actually start running.
Friends who want to seize the opportunity with me, sign up directly: https://t.co/Uu9ak4ecqV
keep building!
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