I realized something recently while moving between wallets, dashboards, bots, watchlists, and notifications.

I barely spent time making decisions.

Most of my time went into maintaining systems that help me make decisions.

That distinction feels important.

Crypto used to feel like markets competing against markets. Now it increasingly feels like workflows competing against workflows. People build personal operating systems around themselves. Alert stacks. Automation layers. Wallet clusters. Information filters. Execution paths.

The strange part is nobody talks about the maintenance cost.

You don’t just manage positions anymore. You manage environments.

Miss one notification layer and context disappears. Use the wrong workflow and execution changes. Small inefficiencies compound quietly until they become structural disadvantages.

That’s partly why @GeniusOfficial caught my attention.

Not because of another interface or another promise of efficiency, but because Genius Terminal seems built around reducing coordination overhead itself.

Maybe the real shift is that on-chain participants are becoming operators before they become traders.

And I’m not sure whether simplifying workflows creates better decisions…

Or simply gives people more room to create even more complexity.

#genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial

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