On September 16, MuleRun officially launched as the world’s first AI agent marketplace, promising to change how we get things done online.
Think of it as an app store for digital workers: a place where you can shop for plug-and-play AI agents—called ‘Mules’—that handle everything from content creation and investment research to gaming automation and job hunting.
Snapshot of MuleRun Agent Page
Unlike typical AI tools stuck inside browser tabs, these Mules live inside cloud-based virtual machines, meaning they can run full desktop software, log into game clients, or complete multi-step workflows on their own.
In other words, they act less like chatbots and more like actual digital employees.
It’s not just for users, though.
MuleRun is also pitching itself as a creator incubator.
Through its Global AI Agent Creator Program, developers can earn up to USD10,000 in cash incentives, get featured in global media campaigns, and tap into full-stack tech support.
Early adopters, like Chinese creators Laughing_code and YuTou_baby, have already raked in USD1,000+ in sales.
Snapshot of a Popular Mule Created by Laughing
New sign-ups get 1,000 free points to test-drive agents, with referral bonuses that can hit 100,000 points.
This is enough to try dozens of Mules on tasks like price tracking, social content generation, or stock analysis.
Of course, giving autonomous agents full access to virtual machines also raises big questions—security, cost, and transparency chief among them.
How safe is your data?
Can the platform scale without crashing under its own weight?
And will users actually know what these agents are doing behind the scenes?
Those are questions MuleRun will have to answer fast.
But the promise is huge: a YouTube for automation, where workflows become products and productivity goes on autopilot.
Whether it becomes the future of work or just a wild experiment, MuleRun is already challenging how we think about AI, and what it can do for us.
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