When I first got my hands on Vanar, it wasn't just another blockchain with some AI bolted on. The AI is part of the whole thing. Most chains treat AI like an extra – you plug in some oracles or build something separate to fake intelligence. But with Vanar, the AI agents are built right in. They use memory, think, automate stuff, and handle payments right there on the chain.

First thing I noticed was myNeutron, their AI helper. It's not just a chatbot. It remembers past stuff and does things on its own. For me, that's a game changer. Think about using AI in games, virtual worlds, or business systems where the AI learns and does its thing without anyone telling it what to do. I haven't seen that kind of built-in smarts on other chains.
Then, I checked out Kayon, Vanar's brain. I'm pretty sure this is the future of AI on a chain. Kayon lets AI agents make choices that you can check, understand, and use on the chain. What I mean is that businesses can put AI in charge of things like supply chains or customer service, and the results are always clear and verifiable. Too many projects have promised AI that no one can understand, and they crash fast. Vanar solves that.
Automation is the third big thing, and that's where Flows comes in. From what I can tell, Flows lets AI agents do a bunch of stuff safely, reliably, and by themselves. In a game, this could automate the economy or give out NFT rewards. For a business, it might handle contracts or take care of complex tasks on its own. The coolest part? Everything is secure, verifiable, and tied to VANRY as the payment method. This means the AI activity turns into real worth.
Payments are also mixed into this AI setup. A lot of AI networks struggle when their agents need to pay for something. On Vanar, VANRY isn't just a token. It's how the AI agents pay for stuff. These systems can pay for services, settle deals, and work across different systems without needing a human. To me, this is key if you want to blow up real-world AI. Without easy payments, even the smartest AI is stuck with experiments.
Another thing I learned is that cross-chain stuff makes the AI even better. Vanar lets agents work on Base, so they're not stuck on a single chain. I've seen that AI needs access to different users, stuff, and money. By letting them work across chains, Vanar lets the AI spread out, connect to communities, and make real money across networks. That's where VANRY gets more useful as more people use it.
From my point of view, one of the most interesting parts is how AI and VANRY go hand-in-hand. Every choice an AI agent makes and every task it does uses VANRY. I think this is cool because it turns AI into real, measurable activity on the chain. There's a direct link between usage and the token's value. It's way better than most projects where the tokens and activity have nothing to do with each other.
I wanna say that Vanar's AI setup makes things way easier. Developers don't have to hack things together for memory or automation.

