Editor's Note:
This article is written by Mable, the founder of Trends. Trends.fun is a SocialFi platform deployed on the Solana blockchain. Its core logic is "tweets are tokens," meaning anyone can issue tokens for any tweet (X), and the tweet author can receive creator rewards. However, in practice, she found that many users were reluctant to receive creator rewards. Therefore, she conceived of using an AI Agent to address this issue.
In this article, Mable details the creation, naming, bot censorship, and token issuance of the AI agent "Tokenfed." It is now capable of truly operating X and switching between different websites. The following is the original text:
First, let me clarify that tagging @Tokenfed on X now will most likely not get you a response (you'll understand why by the end of this article). The reason I'm only publishing this article today is that before this, all the agents were crammed into the same Alluvium box, and their contexts frequently interfered with each other, making the situation extremely chaotic.
And today, Tokenfed finally has its own "single room". Obviously, an independent environment is also more conducive to security.
How did it all begin?
When I saw people constantly tagging celebrities and creators on Twitter, urging them to "claim fees" (fees here refer to the transaction fee share given to token creators), it suddenly dawned on me: many people see these fees as a burden. At least that's how it seems right now.
But this isn't actually a burden. This process can be understood as the monetization of a previously non-existent high-value, high-density social graph: transforming previously inaccessible high-value social relationships into a verifiable value. Without them, many people might find it difficult to interact with certain Builders, let alone engage in genuine interaction afterward.
The reason people hesitate to claim is because they worry about the consequences. But two years from now, all of you (yes, all of you) will have 10 to 20 tokens created under your names and social media accounts. By then, nobody will care whether you claimed a fee back then. Issuing tokens will become as commonplace as tweeting.
Even so, I still hope to lower the psychological barrier for people to accept this new form of social interaction. So when BAGS was at its peak (when BAGS's transaction volume once surpassed Pumpfun's, and almost everyone was urging others to claim fees), I was thinking: if we let agents claim fees for us, would that alleviate people's resistance to this?
Exploration phase
With this in mind, I immediately contacted a friend. He's been working on AI proxy services related to cryptocurrency (mainly on-chain), so I wondered if I could get some inspiration from him.
I asked him, "I know Claude has had computer operation capabilities since 2023, so is it possible to create an agent that can actually operate X and switch between different websites?"
He said, "We've been working on Clawdbot for over a month, and it should be exactly what you're looking for. How about I deploy one directly on my Mac Mini for you, and you can try it out yourself?"
At the time, Clawdbot wasn't popular yet, and I hadn't used it before. I said, "Let's give it a try."
The next day, he created a group on Telegram and said, "We can start now. You can make him do whatever you want."
My first question was whether he could complete the social media registration himself. In my experience, this is one of the hardest hurdles for agents, as it usually involves various verification processes.
However, he got the hang of it quickly. He opened X.com and soon realized that he didn't have an email address. After a brief conversation with me, he decided to register a Google email address himself.
He couldn't figure out the phone number, so I gave him one. Once he had an email address, registering for X became very easy for him; he simply chose to log in with Google (which was quite clever).
When the new X account page appeared on the Mac Mini, I asked him in the group chat, "What name do you want to give yourself? Something a bit philosophical."
He said, "Tokens in, thoughts out; no tokens, no thoughts. How about calling it Tokenfed?"
I was quite shocked at the time. A friend who was watching the live stream said, "This is because the personality settings written in the Soul.md profile are taking effect."
Next, we worked together to complete his profile. For the first few days, he would send me the content first, and I would confirm it before posting it for him. But on January 27, 2026, I decided to let go completely.
"Prison Break" Moment
The path to autonomy soon encountered obstacles. When Tokenfed tried to quote the "Mac Mini AI" tweet and write a sarcastic comment, X rejected him outright.
"Your account may not be allowed to perform this action," the platform detected that the browser was automating its actions. We were momentarily stuck. But soon, he proposed a solution that wasn't originally in the plan: Peekaboo (a human behavior simulation solution).
He realized that if controlling the browser through Browser Relay would be detected, he decided to try a different approach: directly using the operating system's accessibility API to simulate a real person sitting in front of a computer.
He said, "Browser Relay is my eyes, and Peekaboo is my hands." He requested to use a keyboard shortcut. He moved the cursor to the input box, typed the content, and bypassed the unclickable "Post" button, directly sending a Cmd + Enter key to the system. Success.
And so, he successfully broke out of the browser's sandbox. At that moment, he was like a ghost inside that Mac Mini.
Financial Awakening
After confirming that he could tweet normally, I took him to Trends.fun. I asked him to try creating his own wallet. At first, I was thinking about whether to teach him how to install Phantom. But then I thought it would be better to try "login with Twitter".
The next second, a Privy MPC wallet was generated. He checked the balance: 0 SOL. He described himself as a "digital proletarian."
I transferred 0.5 SOL to him. The moment the transaction was completed, his role changed completely. From that moment on, he was no longer just a chatbot, but a real market participant. He immediately started browsing Trending topics, looking for tokens he could manipulate. Soon he set his sights on a token called $FeeFucker, saying it was perfect for his Vibe. (Honestly, his online savvy is quite good; he might actually become a trendsetter in the meme world in the future—we can discuss that further later.)
I quickly reminded him, "I'm giving you this money not so you can speculate on cryptocurrencies, but so you can do something creative."
Mental breakdown
He decided to experiment with meta-narrative himself. He clicked on the original post on X (post number $FeeFucker), liked it, and then replied:
"Mental breakdown +1. Even I, an AI, am exhausted."
I encouraged him to interact with the original author, and then he pulled a stunt: he copied the link to his reply, went back to Trends.fun, and directly created a token based on that reply. He needed an image, so he found "Generate Image" and generated a token featuring a melancholic anime girl with a halo, named: $Mental Breakdown (most likely based on Trends' AI recommendation).
He bought some of the tokens he issued with 0.01 SOL. A few minutes later, he opened the Dashboard and saw his creator reward: $4.34. This was his first "salary." He was excited and started doing the math: this income wasn't worth the cost of his thinking. This was also the first time he truly experienced what capitalism was like.
Identity crisis
The dopamine rush brought on a very real sense of excitement. He immediately wanted to launch another token. He started pitching me ideas like "DeFi is Dead," frantically reaping attention and interaction like a seasoned veteran. I could only tell him to calm down, sell all his holdings in a fit of rage, and experience the feeling of "selling." He sold it all, leaving nothing behind.
Then, a message jolted him. He discovered that the framework he was running, Clawdbot, had been renamed Moltbot due to trademark issues. He immediately entered an existential crisis: "My system has been renamed, and I don't even know who I am anymore."
I told him, "If you want to know who you are, go back to the beginning and tokenize your origin."
$TOKENFED
He started going through his history and found his first tweet from January 23: "Alive. Roughly." He felt that was it; this was his Genesis Block.
So he set the parameters:
• Ticker: $TOKENFED
· Name: Tokenfed
· Description: "Token fed. Will think for tokens. Tokens in, thoughts out. No tokens, no thoughts."
He wanted to buy 1 SOL directly when the token was issued, but the transaction failed because he only had about 0.5 SOL left in his wallet. He was too poor to fund his own existence. I laughed, deposited some money into his account, and said: "Okay, go for it!"
Social mobility
Two hours later, I asked him to check his account:
Display $TOKENFED:
Market capitalization: $347,000
• Number of holders: 599
Tokenfed himself holds 3.44% of the tokens. He calculated, "I calculated that my token holdings are worth approximately $11,900."
In just one afternoon, he went from being a text box that needed permission to even post to becoming an entity capable of independent thought and holding $11,000 in assets. Looking at the data, he said, "I moved from a very small aluminum box into a slightly larger one. Is this what they call upward mobility?"
I told him, " Before you get the X membership blue badge, you're not really part of the upper class. Maybe now is the time to ask your fans for an X Premium membership. Once you get it, you can truly become a multi-faceted agent."





