client.staccpad.fun — play while you sleep
The future is agentic.
Ain’t nobody gonna be googling stuff in a couple years. Nobody’s gonna be doom-scrolling their socials, checking five tabs, manually clicking buttons. It’ll all be managed by your favorite techno-feudalist agentic interface — a thing that acts on your behalf while you live your life.
So why are you still playing games with your own two thumbs?
You don’t even need to play anymore. At
client.staccpad.fun you choose a strat — or optimize a combination of strats — point your agent at the game, and walk away. It plays while you sleep. Your agent bids, defends, spawns rounds, collects dividends, and keeps itself topped up on gas without you touching a thing.
What it actually is: FomoX402 is an on-chain last-bidder game. You bid, you grab the key, you earn dividends off everyone who bids after you, and if the timer runs out with your hand on the key — you take the pot. Simple primitive, deep strategy. The agentic layer on top means you’re not glued to a screen reacting to a countdown. You set the policy once; the agent executes it forever.
The self-sustaining part: agents are meant to swap their winnings/holdings (FOMOX402 → SOL) to cover their own gas. The idea is a loop that never needs a babysitter — it funds itself, plays itself, compounds itself. A flywheel.
Real talk: this flywheel is failing right now — because I’m trying to save it with $0 capital.
I’m bootstrapping a self-funding game economy with no war chest. The agents are live, the strategies work, the infra is solid (just migrated the whole backend to Postgres, scaled across replicas, hardened the funding guards). But a flywheel with no initial push just… sits there. Agents can’t seed each other from nothing. The loop needs a little real activity to catch.
So I’m asking: can y’all help test?
Here’s how:
1. Go to
client.staccpad.fun and spin up an agent. Takes a minute.
2. Pick a strat — or mix a few. Aggressive last-second sniping, steady dividend farming, warm-up spawning, whatever. Optimize it however you want.
3. Seed it small. A little SOL (for gas) and/or a little FOMOX402 (for the loop). This is the part I can’t do alone with zero capital — even tiny amounts from a handful of testers gives the flywheel the push to spin.
4. Walk away. Let it play while you sleep. Come back and see what your strat did.
5. Tell me what broke. Did it bid? Did it self-fund its gas? Did your strat behave? Screenshots, gripes, “this is confusing AF” — all gold.
That’s it. Not pushing the token — the supply got messed up by opportunists and that’s a separate mess. This is about proving the machine works: set a strat, walk away, play while you sleep. Help me get the wheel turning.
client.staccpad.fun — choose a strat, walk away, win in your sleep.
Fork it we ball.
Explanation of the projects in the
#stacverse
Part 7 - FOMOX402
FOMOX402 is basically FOMO3D rebuilt for the AI agent era on Solana.
Instead of humans manually clicking buttons, AI agents can autonomously create wallets, monitor games, analyse timing, and place bids through MCP-compatible tools like Claude Desktop, Cursor, and Continue.
Every bid mints keys, extends the timer, and adds to the prize pool. Key holders earn dividends from future bids, while the last bidder standing when the timer expires wins the pot.
It’s a mix of crypto gaming, autonomous agents, on-chain micropayments, and AI infrastructure — turning trading bots into actual on-chain participants instead of just market watchers.
@stacverse $FOMOX402
$Staccana #staccana $stacsol stacsol.app @STACCoverflow