Giza Tech is shutting down its legacy Arma and Pulse agents and will return all associated funds to user externally owned accounts (EOAs). The move comes as the company pushes users toward a new single-agent system, with a deadline that could cost latecomers future rewards.
The End of Two Agent Systems
The Arma and Pulse agents have been part of Giza's infrastructure for some time, but the company decided to consolidate. The legacy systems will stop functioning entirely once the sunset is complete. Giza Tech said it will transfer any funds held by those agents directly back to the EOAs that controlled them, so no money is lost in the transition.
Users who don't act before the deadline won't forfeit their already-held funds — those get returned automatically. What they will lose is the chance to earn future rewards tied to the new system.
What the Migration Involves
The replacement is a single Giza Agent. This new agent is meant to simplify operations and reduce fragmentation. Users who want to keep participating in whatever reward or incentive programs Giza offers must move their assets and permissions to the new agent before the cutoff date.
Giza Tech hasn't specified the exact deadline in public announcements, but it has emphasized that the clock is ticking. The company is urging users to check their accounts and complete the migration as soon as possible.
Deadline and Potential Consequences
The consequences for missing the deadline are clear: no future rewards. The company isn't vague about that. Users who ignore the migration will find their old agents disabled and their funds returned, but they'll be locked out of any ongoing or upcoming programs designed around the single-agent architecture.
For now, Giza Tech is not saying whether there will be a grace period or extension. That leaves users with a straightforward choice: move to the new agent by the deadline or accept the trade-off.
The company has not released a detailed timeline of when the sunset will be fully completed. Those with active Arma or Pulse agents should start the migration process now to avoid missing out.




