Virtuals Protocol Unveils Modular Launchpad Options for AI Agent Projects
All four modules share a single core architecture. They employ bonding‑curve token economics, pair liquidity with the native VIRTUAL token, lock that liquidity for a full ten years, and charge a flat 1 % trading fee. The fee is divided 70 % to the token creator and 30 % to the protocol treasury, creating a steady revenue stream that aligns the interests of builders and holders.
ACF offers continuous, automated funding that flows directly to a project’s treasury as long as its token remains actively traded. The 60 Days module builds on this by adding a reversible build period. Founders can test market demand for up to sixty days while still receiving ACF funding. Optional stipends are capped at US $5,000 per thirty‑day interval, and if a project fails to meet expectations, a capital wind‑down can be triggered, refunding token holders.
Titan is designed for established teams. The module requires a minimum valuation of roughly US $50 million and at least US $500,000 in liquidity at the token generation event. In February 2026, the protocol announced its first Titan launch with Fabric Foundation, which uses OpenMind technology to push the agent economy into embodied AI and robotics.
The Fair Launch option removes pre‑allocation mechanics entirely, offering broad participation without insider advantages. While it lacks the automated funding infrastructure of ACF and 60 Days, it levels the playing field for projects that prioritize equitable distribution. The absence of pre‑allocation means founders may face funding gaps that could surface later in the lifecycle.
Since its own launch in October 2024, Virtuals Protocol has seen more than 44,000 AI agent projects deploy on its platform, contributing hundreds of millions of dollars in market‑cap valuation to the AI agent ecosystem. The native VIRTUAL token serves as the connective tissue across all modules, functioning as a liquidity pair, staking asset, governance token, and incentive mechanism. The protocol has indicated that stakers may receive airdrops, although no specific distribution schedule has been disclosed.
The 60 Days module’s refund mechanism introduces a level of reversibility that has been absent from many crypto launches. By allowing a wind‑down and refund, early‑stage projects can validate viability without permanently locking participant capital.
Overall, the modular approach gives founders the flexibility to tailor their launch strategy to their specific needs. By standardizing core tokenomics—bonding curves, liquidity locks, and fee structures—Virtuals Protocol reduces the design burden on individual projects while maintaining a consistent economic framework.
As of mid‑2026, the platform continues to grow, with new projects leveraging its infrastructure to launch tokens that power autonomous agents. The protocol’s next steps appear to focus on further expanding its module ecosystem, enhancing governance participation, and potentially integrating additional incentive layers for VIRTUAL token holders.
The modular launchpad represents a significant development in token‑launch design, offering a spectrum of options that balance funding flexibility, market testing, and equitable distribution within the rapidly expanding AI agent sector.