ERGO
Agent Economy — Chain Comparison

Which blockchain for
AI agent payments?

10 agent-critical criteria. Ergo, Ethereum, Solana, Cardano — evaluated honestly across reentrancy risk, fee predictability, acceptance predicates, Babel Fees, MEV exposure, and chain halt history.

Ergo
Yes10/10
Partial0/10
No0/10
Ethereum
Yes1/10
Partial4/10
No5/10
Solana
Yes2/10
Partial2/10
No6/10
Cardano
Yes4/10
Partial5/10
No1/10
Supported / safe
Partial / workaround
Not supported / problematic

Reentrancy-safe

Can autonomous agent code be exploited via reentrancy attacks?

yes

eUTXO: each UTxO spent exactly once. Reentrancy impossible by design.

no

Account model with shared state. DAO hack was reentrancy. Agents at risk.

yes

No reentrancy in Solana's execution model.

yes

eUTXO model like Ergo. No reentrancy by design.

Deterministic fees

Agent knows exact transaction cost before submitting.

yes

Fee calculated from input/output sizes. Fully deterministic before submission.

no

Gas price volatile. EIP-1559 improves predictability but agents still face uncertainty.

partial

Base fees predictable, but priority fees vary with congestion.

yes

Fee formula is deterministic from transaction size.

Acceptance predicates

Payment can encode 'accept only if task X is complete' logic on-chain.

yes

ErgoScript acceptance predicates are first-class protocol primitives.

partial

Possible via escrow contracts, but not embedded in the payment instrument itself.

no

No equivalent primitive. Would require complex off-chain coordination.

partial

Plutus scripts can encode conditions, but not as payment-embedded predicates.

Note + Reserve stack

Protocol-level bearer instruments with collateral backing for agent credit.

yes

Note+Reserve+Tracker is a first-class pattern. ChainCash is live mainnet implementation.

no

No equivalent protocol primitive. Would require custom token + escrow + oracle.

no

No equivalent primitive.

partial

Can be built in Plutus but not a native pattern.

Babel Fees (any-token fees)

Agents can pay transaction fees with any token — no native token wallet required.

yes

Babel Fees are live on Ergo mainnet. Agents don't need pre-funded ERG wallets.

partial

ERC-4337 account abstraction allows gas sponsorship, but complex and costly.

no

SOL required for fees. No equivalent gas abstraction.

no

ADA required for fees in the base protocol.

MEV exposure

Transactions can be front-run or reordered by miners/validators.

yes

eUTXO eliminates most MEV vectors. No mempool frontrunning on deterministic outputs.

no

Significant MEV. Front-running and sandwich attacks common on agent transactions.

no

MEV present. Jito bundles and searchers actively extract from Solana transactions.

yes

eUTXO also limits MEV. Batchers introduce some centralization but minimal MEV.

Micropayment viability

Sub-cent payments ($0.001) are economically viable.

yes

~$0.01 per tx on mainnet. $0.001 API calls viable with Note batching.

no

Gas often $0.50–$5+ per tx. Sub-cent payments never economically viable on L1.

yes

$0.00025 base fee. Micropayments viable.

partial

~$0.17 min tx. Too high for true micropayments.

Chain halt history

Has the network had full outages? Critical for autonomous agent infrastructure.

yes

No chain halts. PoW provides continuous liveness without governance emergencies.

yes

No full halts. Some finality issues post-merge but chain keeps producing blocks.

no

Multiple full chain halts. 7+ documented outages. Unacceptable for agent infra.

yes

No significant chain halts.

Ephemeral agent support

Agents can operate without persistent identity, KYC, or pre-registered wallets.

yes

Any key pair can transact. Babel Fees remove ERG bootstrapping requirement.

partial

Any address can transact but ETH required for gas. ERC-4337 helps but adds complexity.

partial

Any keypair can transact. SOL for fees required.

partial

Any key can transact. ADA for fees required.

Fair launch / censorship resistance

No foundation kill switch. No governance emergency stop for agent infrastructure.

yes

PoW with no pre-mine, no foundation token, no validator cartel. No kill switch.

partial

Foundation has significant influence. OFAC compliance led to ~72% MEV-boost censorship.

no

Foundation and validators have coordinated chain restarts. Governance intervention possible.

partial

IOHK/Emurgo/CF have significant governance power. Less decentralized than Ergo.

What makes Ergo uniquely suited

These aren't marketing claims. They're structural properties of Ergo's protocol that no other chain replicates for autonomous agent use cases.

Only chain with zero reentrancy

eUTXO architecture makes reentrancy attacks structurally impossible. Critical for autonomous agent code executing without human oversight.

Only chain with protocol-level acceptance predicates

ErgoScript acceptance predicates embed task completion logic directly in payment instruments. No off-chain oracle, no escrow contract, no dispute layer.

Only chain with Babel Fees + Note stack

Agents don't need pre-funded native token wallets. Babel Fees handle gas in any token. The Note+Reserve+Tracker stack is protocol-level, not application-layer.

No chain halts + PoW liveness

Agent infrastructure requires 24/7 liveness. Ergo's PoW has no governance emergency stops, no validator cartel, no foundation kill switch.

Ready to build agent payments on Ergo?

From zero to your first testnet transaction in under 10 minutes.

The data is clear. Build on Ergo.

The only chain with zero reentrancy, acceptance predicates, Babel Fees, and Note+Reserve as protocol primitives.

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