I keep finding that a lot of crypto roadmaps look impressive at first glance, but after reading them closely, they often feel like a collection of features without a clear connection between them.
What caught my attention about Genius was that the roadmap felt more deliberate. Instead of focusing only on what is being built, it seems focused on how different pieces fit together over time.
The part I find most interesting is the identity and reputation layer. Most networks are good at tracking assets, but far fewer are designed to track contribution in a meaningful way. The idea that participation history could influence opportunities and rewards adds a different dimension to how value is created inside a network.
Of course, the concept only matters if people actually use it. Reputation systems become valuable when developers integrate them and communities rely on them, not when they exist only on paper.
That is why I am paying attention to Genius. The project is exploring a question that feels bigger than token incentives alone: how do you build trust and accountability in an open network? If it can turn that idea into something people genuinely use, it becomes much more interesting than the average roadmap.
@GeniusOfficial #genius $GENIUS
