Humans are too lazy to shop. AI agents with wallets are taking over. Bluerails lets you optimize your site and get paid by autonomous bots.

Are you still staying up all night optimizing meta tags and building backlinks for human traffic? Wake up, bro. It's 2025. The web is shifting faster than a junior dev dropping a production database. Humans don't shop anymore; they just hand their wallets to AI agents and say, "Go buy me this." But is your spaghetti code ready to receive cash from an autonomous bot? Or will the crawler look at your site, throw a 500 error, and leave?
Bluerails Discovery just launched on Product Hunt, bagging a solid 414 points, and it's tackling this exact dystopian-yet-profitable problem.
For those who are too lazy to read the long pitch, here is the quick TL;DR on what Bluerails actually does:
llms.txt file and schema fixes to make your site readable for LLM scrapers.Over on Product Hunt and dev forums, developers are splitting into two camps: the hype-train riders and the skeptical veterans.
One SaaS founder admitted: "Honestly, I have no idea if my product is even visible to AI agents right now. Time to give this a spin before we go completely obsolete."
Many are excited about the transition from basic Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) to actual transactional infrastructure. "Getting mentioned by an LLM is one thing, but making your product fully buyable by a bot is the real holy grail," an anonymous dev commented.
However, seasoned developers aren't easily fooled by startup buzzwords. One sharp dev asked: "How does an agent actually pay through Bluerails? Is it a pre-funded wallet, micropayments per query, or what?"
Co-founder Jens hopped in to clarify the mechanics:
Is this tool overhyped? Sure, there's always a healthy dose of VC marketing flavor in these launches. But looking at it pragmatically, the concept of Agentic Commerce is very real.
The days of users clicking on the top Google Search results are slowly dying. The future belongs to Machine-to-Machine transactions. If your API is undocumented, your website requires heavy Javascript rendering that causes bot scrapers to choke, or you lack structured schema, you basically don't exist.
What should you do today as a practical dev?
llms.txt file into your root directory. Think of it as robots.txt but designed to feed clean data to LLMs.Source: Product Hunt