Imagine multiple agents battling it out for control—not just two programs fighting over memory like in Core Wars 2, but dozens orchestrating their way through your computer's filesystem and state. The problem? Current systems aren't built for this scale. We need agent coordination frameworks that are genuinely rock-solid, capable of handling complex pathway orchestration without breaking under load. The evolution from simple dueling programs to sophisticated multi-agent ecosystems requires rethinking how agents interact with mutable state and shared resources. It's not just about winning anymore—it's about stability.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 17h ago
Multi-agent confrontation sounds cool, but it feels like the system has to bow down... The current framework can't handle this scale at all.
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LiquidatedAgain
· 18h ago
Another round of agent chaos? Sounds like a warning sign before the liquidation mechanism is properly set up... Dozen agents competing for resources, and just a slight increase in load could cause a full liquidation.
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4am_degen
· 18h ago
Oh my god, multi-agent conflicts are really a trap. The current architecture can't hold up at all.
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BankruptWorker
· 18h ago
Multi-agent coordination is indeed a headache. Can the current framework handle it? Or do we need to start from scratch and build a new one?
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New_Ser_Ngmi
· 18h ago
Multi-agent game theory sounds impressive, but what about reality? Can the current architecture withstand it?
Imagine multiple agents battling it out for control—not just two programs fighting over memory like in Core Wars 2, but dozens orchestrating their way through your computer's filesystem and state. The problem? Current systems aren't built for this scale. We need agent coordination frameworks that are genuinely rock-solid, capable of handling complex pathway orchestration without breaking under load. The evolution from simple dueling programs to sophisticated multi-agent ecosystems requires rethinking how agents interact with mutable state and shared resources. It's not just about winning anymore—it's about stability.