If you asked me six months ago what the hottest topic in crypto would be during the second half of 2026, I probably would have said tokenization, ETFs, or stablecoins.
Today, I would give a very different answer.
AI agents.
Walking through the discussions coming out of Berlin Blockchain Week, one thing is impossible to ignore.
Developers are no longer asking whether AI will participate in crypto.
They are asking how quickly AI can become an economic actor on-chain.
That shift may sound subtle.
I think it changes everything.
Berlin Has Become the Meeting Point for the Next Internet
Every year, Berlin Blockchain Week attracts builders, founders, researchers, and investors from around the world.
The atmosphere this year feels different.
Web3 Summit 2026 is packed.
AI Agents Summit is generating even more attention.
Scroll through crypto X today and you will notice the same phrases appearing repeatedly.
Agentic Payments.
Autonomous Wallets.
Machine-to-Machine Commerce.
AI-Native Economies.
A year ago these ideas sounded experimental.
Now venture capital firms are actively looking for teams building them.
The Question Everyone Is Discussing
What happens when an AI agent gets its own crypto wallet?
That sounds simple.
The implications are massive.
Imagine an AI assistant managing cloud computing resources.
Instead of asking for permission, it could automatically purchase computing power.
Imagine a trading agent paying for real-time market data.
Imagine a research agent hiring another AI agent to perform specialized tasks.
No human clicks.
No credit card forms.
No banking hours.
Just software interacting economically with other software.
Crypto suddenly becomes much more than an investment asset.
It becomes infrastructure.
Why Traditional Payments Are a Problem
One reason developers are excited about Agentic Payments is because traditional financial systems were never designed for autonomous software.
Banks expect human identities.
Credit card networks expect human customers.
Most payment rails assume a person sits behind every transaction.
AI agents break that assumption.
A software agent might need to:
- Send payments every few seconds
- Purchase tiny amounts of data
- Pay for API requests automatically
- Hire other agents for specific tasks
- Operate continuously across time zones
Cryptocurrency networks are one of the few payment systems capable of supporting that environment today.
That reality is drawing increasing attention from both developers and investors.
A Conversation I Could Easily Imagine in Berlin
Developer:
Why should an AI need a wallet?
Founder:
Because economic activity requires ownership.
Developer:
Can software really own assets?
Founder:
If software creates value and spends value, ownership becomes a practical necessity.
Developer:
That sounds like science fiction.
Founder:
Most major technologies sound like science fiction before they become infrastructure.
The interesting part is that this conversation is no longer hypothetical.
Teams are actively building these systems.
The Missing Piece of the AI Economy
For months, I have noticed that most AI discussions focus on intelligence.
Bigger models.
Faster reasoning.
Better performance.
Very few people discuss incentives.
That is where blockchain enters the picture.
Intelligence alone does not create an economy.
Participants need a way to exchange value.
An AI that can reason but cannot transact remains dependent on humans.
An AI that can reason and transact becomes something entirely different.
That distinction explains why Web3 developers are suddenly paying so much attention.
Why Venture Capital Is Paying Attention
VCs love large market opportunities.
Agentic Payments potentially creates a new market category altogether.
If millions of AI agents eventually operate online, they will need infrastructure.
Wallets.
Identity systems.
Payment networks.
Reputation layers.
Settlement protocols.
The companies building those components today could become foundational pieces of tomorrow’s digital economy.
That possibility is driving significant investment interest.
Many investors are starting to view AI agents as future economic participants rather than simple software tools.
My Take
The most important discussion happening in Berlin this week is not about meme coins.
It is not about the next layer-two network.
It is not even about crypto prices.
It is about whether software can become financially independent.
That question sits at the intersection of artificial intelligence and blockchain technology.
If AI agents eventually gain the ability to hold assets, make payments, negotiate contracts, and interact with other agents autonomously, we may be witnessing the early foundations of an entirely new economic system.
That future may take years to arrive.
Or it may arrive faster than most people expect.
The conversations happening at Berlin Blockchain Week suggest that many of the industry’s smartest builders are preparing for the second possibility.
And whenever developers and capital start moving in the same direction, I pay very close attention.

















