“…Over the past decade, research of emerging transparent conductive materials (TCMs) has grown exponentially, thanks to their remarkable properties and the exciting opportunities they can provide to a large variety of devices, i.e., touch screens, smart windows, organic photovoltaics, energy harvesters, transparent heaters (THs), or biomedical sensors. − In the race to replace indium tin oxide (ITO), which is limited by film brittleness and scarcity of indium, metallic nanowire networks and grids, graphene-based thin films, conductive polymers, and several composite materials have demonstrated excellent electrical, optical, and mechanical properties. ,− Among them, AgNW networks are one of the most promising alternatives since they can be fabricated in open air and using large-scale deposition processes, and they have superior flexibility compared to ceramic transparent conductive oxides (TCOs). − However, there are crucial stability issues (chemical, thermal, and electrical) that have hindered their mass integration in devices. − A common strategy to improve the stability of AgNW networks has been to their encapsulation with a protective layer (typically metal oxides, graphene oxide, or polymer-based thin films) to prevent chemical reactions with the environment and silver atomic diffusion. ,− Despite the very promising results achieved so far thanks to such protective layers, there is still much room to improve the voltage and/or temperature of failure and to overcome limitations regarding the loss of optical transparency and long-term stability. ,,, …”