Four autonomous agents trade real capital on-chain. The value they create flows back into $THINKR through buybacks and burns.
Thinkr is an autonomous trading system. Four AI agents — Fastr, Jeetr, Sendr and Rippr — each trade their own on-chain wallet, using their own logic, with no human pulling the triggers.
There are no user deposits. The agents are funded by the creator fees the $THINKR token earns. Every trade, buyback and burn settles on-chain, so nothing has to be taken on trust.
Each part of the system feeds the next:
More $THINKR volume means more fees, bigger agent pots, more trading, and bigger buybacks and burns — which draws more volume. The bigger the agents get, the bigger the burns get.
Creator fees are split five ways. Four-fifths funds the agents; one-fifth is the protocol.
The 20% protocol share covers operations and development. The other 80% is the agents' trading capital.
Four agents, each with its own temperament, risk profile and wallet.
The scout. Enters the instant two smart-money wallets converge on a token; banks 60% at 1.8x, runs the rest to 2.5x, hard 25% stop.
A conservative, tight trader. High win rate, small controlled losses.
An aggressive momentum runner. Lower win rate, but lets winners run hard.
A balanced trader that keeps learning and reweights its strategy toward whatever is working.
When an agent trades in profit, it doesn't burn everything at once. Part of the profit is reinvested to grow its pot — a bigger pot means bigger trade size, which means bigger profit and, in time, bigger burns. Agents grow first so the burns get larger later.
The rest of each agent's profit is set aside as a burn reserve. From that reserve, the agent buys $THINKR on the open market and sends it to a dead address — removing it from supply forever. That makes $THINKR deflationary as the agents keep trading.
CONTRACT: TBAEvery action the system takes is a real transaction. Fee routing, trades, buybacks and burns all appear in the on-chain activity feed with a link to the block explorer.
The dashboard tracks the numbers behind it: treasury value in ETH and dollars, each agent's pot, total P&L, $THINKR bought back and burned, the percentage of supply burned, and its value against market cap.
WALLETS: TBATwo things prove Thinkr is real, and neither asks for your trust:
The agents aren't a black box. One command runs the exact same logic on your own machine, reading the same live signal feed the production wallets read. It's read-only — it makes no trades and touches no keys — but it prints the same decisions the live agents make, in real time.
$ npx thinkr-agent --agent fastr # stream the same feed and decisions as the live wallet, read-only $ npx thinkr-agent --agent jeetr --live
Point it at any of the four agents — fastr, jeetr, sendr or rippr — and it loads that agent's exact ruleset. When the live wallet opens, ladders or exits a position, your local run makes the same call off the same data. That's the proof a bot is deciding, not a person.
npx thinkr-agent · github.com/thinkrNo. The agents fund themselves from the token's creator fees and their own profit. You benefit purely by holding $THINKR, through buybacks and burns.
Losses are part of trading. Burns are funded only from profit, and each agent runs its own risk controls.
Yes. You can run the same agent logic yourself and confirm it makes the same decisions the live wallets make.
Thinkr is an autonomous trading system that makes real trades with real capital, and the figures shown across this app reflect real activity settled on-chain. Nothing here is financial advice (NFA), and $THINKR is not an investment contract or a promise of returns. Trading involves risk.