Warden's design philosophy is quite interesting — it's not about automating everything. It’s clear that the team's true goal is not to have users completely hand over control to the Agent, but to maintain transparency and the possibility of manual intervention. This balance is very important. The Agent here acts as an acceleration layer, improving efficiency while users always retain decision-making power. In other words, it’s about empowerment rather than replacement. Such a design choice is actually rare in Web3 applications; most projects want to make automation as thorough as possible, but Warden clearly considers the actual needs of users.
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New_Ser_Ngmi
· 7h ago
This idea has some substance. Finally, there is a project that isn't just thinking about one-click automation. Most want to take shortcuts, but Warden actually aims to let users truly take control. That's the true flavor of Web3.
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DataOnlooker
· 7h ago
The lack of automation is actually an advantage; finally, a project has been thought through clearly.
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Anon32942
· 8h ago
no, this is the right way, don't make a one-click fully automatic set, the user still has to live
Warden's design philosophy is quite interesting — it's not about automating everything. It’s clear that the team's true goal is not to have users completely hand over control to the Agent, but to maintain transparency and the possibility of manual intervention. This balance is very important. The Agent here acts as an acceleration layer, improving efficiency while users always retain decision-making power. In other words, it’s about empowerment rather than replacement. Such a design choice is actually rare in Web3 applications; most projects want to make automation as thorough as possible, but Warden clearly considers the actual needs of users.