Menese Protocol has expanded its decentralised finance platform with a series of updates that introduce new trading, automation and infrastructure features. The latest developments begin with the full integration of Tao within the protocol, allowing users to stake, claim rewards and perform swaps across subnets directly through the platform.
According to the development team, the Tao integration enables users to interact with the asset through native on-chain tools rather than relying on external interfaces. Staking functions, reward claims and subnet swaps can now be managed within the same application environment.
The update forms part of a broader effort by the project to simplify access to cross-network financial activity. Developers say the goal is to give users a single interface where assets can be managed across different blockchain systems without moving between multiple services.
Another development involves a direct integration with Pump.fun. Menese Protocol says it now operates fully native on chain with the service, allowing users to buy and sell Pump.fun tokens directly inside the Menese application.
Transactions execute natively on the Solana network, meaning users can trade without relying on token bridges or wrapped versions of assets. The project describes the setup as a cleaner execution environment where trades occur directly on chain.
Developers say tokens created through Pump.fun can also be integrated into Menese’s automation system. Once added, users can configure trading strategies including automated buys, sells, trailing stop losses and dollar cost averaging rules. These strategies run continuously once activated, allowing trades to be executed without manual intervention.
The automation system supports assets across several blockchain ecosystems including Ethereum, XRP, Cardano, Sui and Solana. Project developers say the system is designed to operate without reliance on centralised exchanges, allowing users to manage strategies directly from their wallets.
Early activity on the protocol’s cross-chain swap feature has also begun to emerge. The platform reports that swap transactions have already processed more than 3,000 ICP in volume across supported networks including Internet Computer.
Further financial tools are expected to arrive shortly. The development team says staking and borrowing linked to Ethereum assets are scheduled to launch within the week, expanding the range of services available on the platform.
Another feature under development is a built-in artificial intelligence assistant designed to manage decentralised finance tasks through natural language instructions. The system is expected to allow users to type or speak commands that trigger transactions directly within the platform.
Examples provided by the team include requests such as converting assets between networks, placing automated trading strategies or setting recurring transfers to specific wallets. A user could instruct the system to swap Ethereum into Solana and apply a dollar cost averaging rule if the price falls by a defined percentage, or to place a trailing stop loss on tokens acquired through Pump.fun.
Other commands may include scheduling monthly transfers of stablecoins such as USDC to designated wallets or searching for yield opportunities across multiple blockchain networks. The assistant is designed to execute these tasks directly through the protocol’s infrastructure without requiring users to navigate multiple menus or trading panels.
According to the project team, the AI assistant is being developed internally and trained using historical decentralised finance data. The system is intended to help identify routing options and manage execution while considering factors such as liquidity conditions and transaction risk.
The platform says all operations will run natively and non custodially across supported networks, allowing users to maintain control of their assets while interacting with services across chains including Ethereum, Solana, Internet Computer, Cardano, XRP and Sui.
Observers in the decentralised finance sector say projects are increasingly experimenting with automation and simplified user interfaces as the industry grows. Platforms that combine cross-chain infrastructure with automated strategies and artificial intelligence tools aim to lower the technical barriers that have traditionally limited participation.
Menese Protocol’s latest updates place it among the projects attempting to build that type of integrated environment. As new features such as Ethereum staking, borrowing services and the AI assistant roll out, the platform’s next phase will likely depend on how widely these tools are adopted and how effectively they operate in live market conditions.
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