The criticism originated from users who argued that Base’s year-long promotion of Zora-based tokens—including projects linked to former employees and public figures—prioritized short-term speculation over genuine community building. Investors pointed to significant financial losses as proof that the model lacked long-term viability. Addressing the feedback on X, Armstrong admitted the content coin strategy did not yield the intended results, noting that it was time for the network to move on.
Base has since realigned its resources, placing trading infrastructure at the top of its development hierarchy, followed by payments and AI-driven tools. While skeptics suggested the network had pivoted exclusively toward AI agents, Armstrong clarified that these technologies are intended to function as a unified ecosystem. He explained that payment services require robust foreign exchange capabilities, while AI agents rely on the trading and payment tools currently under construction. Despite the shift, Base continues to expand its agent-focused toolkit, including the recent launch of Agentic Wallets and the Base MCP interface, which allow automated systems to execute transactions while maintaining user-controlled approval protocols.

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