When Bots Start Farming Each Other: The Next DeFi War


The original “Curve wars” looked chaotic on the surface—protocols bribing veCRV holders, governance drama, and bribe markets forming around liquidity like flies to a very profitable lamp.
But in hindsight, that was version 1.0. A human-heavy, ego-driven, slightly messy experiment in directing liquidity.
What comes next is colder. Faster. And honestly… a little terrifying.
Welcome to Gamified Liquidity Wars 2.0—where the real participants aren’t degens on Discord anymore.
They’re algorithms.
Phase 1: Curve Wars (Human Edition)
The first major liquidity battlefield formed around Curve Finance, where protocols competed to attract liquidity by incentivizing governance token holders.
The logic was simple:
- Lock tokens
- Gain voting power
- Redirect emissions
- Bribe voters for liquidity
It was financial politics, but with extra steps and fewer suits.
Humans optimized yield manually. Protocols bribed humans directly. Twitter got spicy. Everyone felt clever.
But it was still slow.
Phase 2: The Shift Nobody Paid Attention To
While everyone was arguing about governance drama, something quieter was happening:
- Yield optimizers started automating strategy rotation
- Market makers began using reinforcement learning models
- Treasury management became API-driven
- Incentive routing got abstracted away from humans entirely
At first, these were just tools.
Now they are becoming the actual participants.
Phase 3: AI vs AI Liquidity Wars
Here’s the uncomfortable upgrade:
Protocols are no longer just about bribing users.
They are bribing systems that decide for users.
Think about it:
- A liquidity protocol doesn’t target “LPs” anymore
- It targets yield-optimization agents that constantly reallocate capital
- Bribes are structured as machine-readable incentive feeds
- Execution is instantaneous, continuous, and non-human
So instead of:
“Hey human, move your liquidity here for 8% APY”
It becomes:
“Hey algorithm, I’ll outbid any competitor for your allocation ruleset in real time”
This is no longer marketing.
It’s automated economic warfare.
The New Battlefield: Incentive APIs
Liquidity incentives are evolving into programmable streams:
- Dynamic reward curves updated per block
- Machine-readable “priority feeds” for capital routing
- Autonomous treasury agents negotiating yield conditions
- Cross-protocol bidding wars are happening in milliseconds
Humans are still “in the system,” technically.
But more like shareholders in a war being fought by proxy bots.
The Weirdest Part: Bots Will Farm Each Other
Here’s where it gets funny in a dark way.
When every protocol runs an AI allocator, you get loops like:
- Bot A routes liquidity to Protocol X
- Protocol X incentivizes Bot B’s strategy
- Bot B responds by reallocating back to Protocol Y
- Protocol Y adjusts incentives for Bot A again
And suddenly:
👉 Yield isn’t being “earned.”
👉 It’s being recursively negotiated between machines
At that point, DeFi stops looking like finance and starts looking like:
two vending machines endlessly trying to outsmart each other over snacks that replenish themselves
What Actually Wins This Game?
✨ Not the protocol with the highest yield.
💥 Not the one with the best UI.
🌟 Not even the one with the deepest liquidity.
The winner is whoever builds:
the most attractive decision environment for autonomous capital agents
Translation:
- best incentive routing logic
- fastest feedback loops
- lowest friction execution
- smartest reward shaping over time
Liquidity doesn’t follow hype anymore.
It follows computation.
The End of “Yield Farming” as We Know It
The term “yield farming” implies effort. Strategy. Timing.
But in a world of autonomous capital agents, nothing is farmed manually anymore.
Yield becomes:
- continuously optimized
- always rebalanced
- permanently negotiated
Farmers are replaced by systems.
And systems don’t sleep.
Final Thought
Curve wars were about controlling human attention.
The next wars won’t even get attention.
They’ll be fought at machine speed, between agents optimizing other agents, in markets where incentives behave more like physics than finance.
And if that sounds abstract, that’s because it is.
We’re not building DeFi anymore.
We’re building autonomous capital ecosystems that compete with each other for survival.
And the funniest part?
No one’s really in charge of it.
Not even the bots.




