The wallet spans roughly 30 chains from day one, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, Cosmos, Terra, Terra Classic, and the major EVM L2s.
Station is back. The wallet, last opened daily by many crypto users during the Terra era, has returned as an agentic multi-chain wallet, and this time it talks back.
The premise is straightforward: Users state in plain language, by voice or text, what they want Station's agent to do. "Swap 100 USDC for LUNA and stake it." "DCA $200 of ETH every Friday." The agent translates each request into a transaction flow, surfaces it for review, and only signs after the user approves.
Buying assets, bridging funds, staking, recurring sends, and checking balances across the roughly 30 supported chains all flow through the same propose-and-approve loop.
A Familiar Name, Rebuilt
For users who came through crypto during the Terra cycle, Station is not a new product name. It is the wallet many opened daily for years. The relaunch retains the Station identity while moving the product onto a multi-chain MPC stack, with native Terra and Terra Classic support a deliberate part of the comeback. Station is meeting its original users where they left off, with the wallet they used during that cycle now extended across the major ecosystems they have moved to since.
What Makes Station Different
Most agentic wallets launched in the past year were built the other way around: wallets for autonomous agents, not agents for wallet users. The category quietly assumes the autonomous agent is the customer, a self-driving bot that needs keys and therefore needs a vault. Most entries also restrict themselves to a single chain or a tight cluster of chains, because exposing a multi-chain key surface to an autonomous program is a security problem most projects choose not to solve at launch.
Station inverts both choices.
The agent here works for the user, not the other way around. It custodies no keys, executes nothing without explicit user approval, and does not operate between commands. The user is the one giving instructions, and the user is the one signing, every time.
The wallet spans roughly 30 chains from day one, including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, Cosmos, Terra, Terra Classic, and the major EVM L2s. It presents them as a single conversational surface rather than as separate apps stitched together. For the user, the practical result is an agent that lives inside a consumer wallet rather than behind a back-end service: one they can talk to in plain language, with sign-off on every transaction that touches their funds.
What Users Can Actually Do
Three capabilities anchor the launch.
The Security Model
Station uses a 2-of-3 multi-party computation (MPC) signing scheme. Signing authority is split across three key shares: one held on the user's device, one on a paired device or backup, and one on a partner signing network. No single share can move funds alone, removing the single-point-of-failure risk inherent to seed-phrase wallets. Station's MPC infrastructure is provided by Vultisig.
The Transition Airdrop
Station is live now on iOS and Android.
Explore Station at station.money. Follow @StationWallet for launch and airdrop updates.
(CMC Labs: Partnership)
Disclaimer: This article was written by an outside contributor and does not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of CoinMarketCap.
