
A Builder's Map to the Morca Product Stack
How Morca’s products connect across prediction markets, DeFi agents, data marketplaces, stablecoin wallets, and research infrastructure.
Publication

Morca’s product stack is intentionally broad, but it is not random. Each product explores a different part of the same thesis: the future of Web3 belongs to applications that combine market structure, automation, privacy, and high-quality interfaces.
Vezta sits on the market-intelligence side of the stack. Prediction markets produce useful signals, but the raw experience is still fragmented across venues, categories, liquidity conditions, and settlement models. Vezta is designed as a terminal: a place where users can discover markets, compare opportunities, follow performance, and execute with fewer gaps between information and action. The product direction includes casual access for new users and more powerful terminal features for active traders.
Tasmil Finance sits on the automation side. DeFi is rich with yield sources and strategy paths, but the operational burden is high. Users need to track APYs, understand protocol risk, approve transactions, bridge liquidity, and rebalance positions. Tasmil reframes that workflow around agents: natural-language interaction for immediate tasks, automated earning strategies for longer-running allocation, and strategy launch infrastructure for builders who want to package their own DeFAI agents.
Oyrade sits on privacy-preserving market participation. Prediction markets are information markets. In fully transparent environments, a trader’s wallet history can reveal intent, timing, position size, and strategy. Oyrade’s direction is to combine AMM-driven liquidity, session-based wallet abstraction, and zero-knowledge validation so participants can trade with more discretion while settlement remains verifiable.
Botanary Finance sits on the consumer and business wallet layer. It focuses on stablecoin money movement: payments, savings, remittance, invoices, payroll, and agentic commerce. The technical foundation is account abstraction: passkeys, paymasters, social recovery, and permissioned sessions. The user-facing goal is not to make people admire ERC-4337. It is to make stablecoin finance feel safer, faster, and less technical.
Capydata sits on data ownership and monetization. If AI and onchain economies increasingly depend on data, then data should have better rails for ownership, access control, pricing, and exchange. Capydata explores that surface on Sui, where object-centric design can support a more explicit marketplace model for digital assets.
The products also inform each other. Vezta’s market data can influence agent workflows. Tasmil’s automation patterns can inform Botanary’s agent permissions. Oyrade’s privacy research can shape future market and wallet experiences. Capydata’s data-market thinking can feed AI and analytics products.
The stack is early, but the strategic shape is clear: build high-trust products at the edge of Web3 where users need better interfaces, stronger automation, and less operational friction.