Bankless: 5 Free Tools to Find AI Brokered Tokens

Reprinted from jinse
01/08/2025·4MAuthor: Kazu Umemoto, Bankless; Compiler: Deng Tong, Golden Finance
Cryptocurrency enthusiasts are on the lookout for early-stage investment opportunities as the market value of artificial intelligence agents soars during the holidays.
During the gold rush of new proxies and tokens, it’s nearly impossible to separate useful information from noise, but data can be the backbone of investing if you can combine it with the right parameters and arguments.
The following five tools can become must-have applications to help uncover opportunities for AI agents:
Cookie.fun
Cookie.fun is a popular proxy-native tool that is gaining traction. The biggest highlight for free users is their token dashboard, which showcases engagement-focused metrics highlighting share and impressions relative to price action.
You can also filter certain AI agents, such as those launched on Virtuals or others using the ai16z Eliza framework. Not only is it a great tool to view the top AI agents, but it can also catch some that are rising in terms of presence before the entire crypto space notices them.
The platform offers benefits to free users, but there are many features behind the paywall, although unlocking these features requires locking up to 10,000 COOKIE tokens, which currently trade at $0.65.
Arkham
Let's say you want to track the wallets of these AI agents to see how they are performing. Arkham is a simple yet excellent tool once you find the wallet for the AI agent you want. Arkham’s dashboard tracks their holdings, balance history, and any type of transactions made in the wallet.
A great use case for Arkham is tracking Vader AI's fund performance. Currently, Vader AI offers no way to track its performance on its website other than through updates on Twitter. However, with this Arkham dashboard, you can get all the information you need in one place.
Dune
Dune is a unique data tool compared to other tools on this list because it relies heavily on its community. Anyone can create queries through Dune, extract on-chain data and generate dashboards to create useful visualizations.
You can search for almost any AI agent on Dune and probably already have some kind of dashboard or query created. For example, if you look up ai16z on Dune, one of the top results is the dashboard, which provides insights that are hard to find elsewhere. It highlights the tokens held by ai16z, how its token holdings are performing, and some statistics on the ai16z token itself, such as DEX trading volume.
You don't have to be proficient in SQL to create your own dashboard, either. You can see the query behind the dashboard and feel free to modify it based on whatever information you want to find.
Kaito.AI
Kaito.ai is a tool similar to Cookie.fun, whose main product shows the share of attention occupied by a single AI agent in addition to other trends and memes. Their leaderboard screen shows who has lost and risen the most in attention share each day over the past 3 months.
Kaito.ai is also a great tool for those who regularly use Twitter, tweet and start discussions. They recently completed a Yaps campaign where users can earn Yaps by starting discussions on crypto-related topics on Twitter.
Sentient Market
The final tool that has been overlooked but may be the most useful is Sentient Market. You can look up almost any AI agent there and see a dashboard specific to that agent, showing only the information relevant to it.
For example, if you look up AIXBT on Sentient Market, it will not only show you metrics related to the performance of the AIXBT token, but also some crazy statistics surrounding its tweets. It tracks AIXBT's top calls, average returns, and tweet sentiment. Alternatively, if you're looking for Virtuals, it displays a dashboard showing the number of agents launched and the total amount of VIRTUAL spent on launching AI agents.