deBridge, a cross-chain protocol, has launched an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server, The Block reported on Feb. 16.
deBridge said it was designed to let AI agents and developer tools such as Claude, Cursor and Copilot execute swaps, bridging and multi-step on-chain tasks on Ethereum-compatible chains and Solana.
The deBridge MCP server executes as intended and optimises reliability through routing that takes MEV (Maximal Extractable Value) into account, the company said.
Users retain control of fund management throughout the process, and execution is abstracted through a single interface.
The Bridge MCP server automatically handles wallet coordination, chain switching and transaction retry functions. deBridge said these functions had previously caused friction in automation systems.
Examples of using the deBridge MCP server include an AI trading assistant that rebalances a portfolio across multiple chains and bots that execute multi-step on-chain strategies.
It also allows consumer apps with built-in cross-chain execution to be created. Developer tools that convert natural language into on-chain actions can also be built.
MCP is based on deBridge Bundles, an intent-based execution model launched in December. deBridge Bundles support having the protocol carry out tasks without direct interaction with blockchains when users specify the results they want.