Most projects in crypto and AI start to sound the same after a while. You see the usual words thrown around decentralization, disruption, next big thing but when you strip all that away, there’s often not much left that feels grounded in reality.
What stood out to me about GENIUS is that it doesn’t really try to sell a story first. It starts from a problem that already exists and is getting harder to ignore. AI needs a huge amount of compute, and right now that power is basically controlled by a small number of big companies. If you want serious GPU access, you’re either paying a lot or relying on platforms that ultimately sit outside the “decentralized” world crypto talks about.
For me, the interesting part is the idea of turning unused GPU power into something productive. Not in a flashy way, but in a practical one connecting supply and demand in a space that’s already under pressure. It quietly shifts compute from something you rent from a few providers into something that could, in theory, be distributed across many participants.
What got my attention is that GENIUS is looking at a real bottleneck instead of inventing a new narrative around an old idea. If it actually works, it’s less about hype and more about who controls the backbone of AI infrastructure. And that’s a conversation that feels increasingly hard to avoid.
@GeniusOfficial #genius $GENIUS
