Overview
Agent Luki is a group-payment app that lives inside Telegram, letting one person send money to many people at once. The sender sets aside a pot of funds, and group members claim their share with a single button press, the way you might split a dinner bill or hand out rewards in a chat. What sets it apart is that the whole payout runs on a blockchain, so every claim is recorded and settled without a middleman handling the cash1.
Agent Luki calls each of these group payouts a "Luki Quest." The app first runs on Base, a fast, low-cost network that settles to Ethereum, and uses ETH as its starting currency2. A pending Cardano funding proposal describes a planned expansion that would bring the same quest mechanics to Cardano and add community-management tools3.
Key Features
- One sender pays many people in a single step. The creator deposits a pot of funds and picks how it splits, whether that is equal shares, random amounts, or custom rules, then recipients claim directly from the chat1.
- Claiming is as simple as tapping a button. Each group member presses one button in Telegram to receive their portion, so no one needs a separate app or technical setup to take part1.
- Unclaimed money comes back to the sender. If a quest is not fully claimed, the creator can recover the leftover funds once the 24-hour window closes, so nothing is lost to abandoned payouts1.
- Payouts run on public blockchain rails. Creation, claiming, and refunds are handled by a public smart contract rather than a company ledger, which means each step can be checked by anyone1.
- Built for community rewards and creator payouts. Content creators, community admins, and event organizers use quests to distribute rewards to fans or members straight inside the group chat2.
What to Expect
For most people, Agent Luki feels like sending a message. You interact with it through a Telegram bot: a creator opens a quest and sets the rules, and everyone else sees a claim link appear in the group. Pressing the claim button delivers your share, and the portal stays open for 24 hours before the sender can pull back anything left over.
Agent Luki is in beta, so the create, claim, and refund flow is available for testing on Base while the wider roadmap is still being built. The project documents plans to add more blockchains, let communities register their own tokens, and expand beyond Telegram to platforms such as Discord and Farcaster2. A separate Cardano proposal outlines a longer-term "decentralized CRM" direction with community campaigns and shared-value staking, though that work is proposal-stage and depends on funding3.
The team runs the project directly and documents an intent to move toward community governance, with a native token planned for a later phase2. The documentation walks through how a quest works end to end, from the creator setting distribution rules to how recipients claim and how leftover funds are returned, so a curious reader can understand the mechanics before joining one1.
