#genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial

Genius Terminal describes itself as a non-custodial trading terminal built to make on-chain activity less exhausting. From what’s listed on their official site, it pulls together access to over 150 DEXs across eight or more chains like Solana, BNB Chain, Ethereum and Base, and handles cross-chain trades natively so you don’t have to bridge manually every time. It also offers something called Ghost Orders, where larger trades get split across as many as 500 temporary wallets to keep the activity more private on-chain.

The idea is to cut down on the usual back-and-forth — jumping between chains, switching wallets, approving transactions repeatedly, and watching gas prices and routes the whole time. That daily friction is real for anyone trading across multiple networks, and the platform is trying to smooth it out while staying non-custodial.

Still, the bigger question doesn’t really go away. Even with a cleaner interface, it’s not always obvious how routes are chosen, what the actual costs end up being after everything, or what trust assumptions are sitting underneath. Making things simpler is useful, but it doesn’t automatically mean users, can see and understand what’s actually happening with their trades.

Do you think that trade off is worth it, or does the convenience come with too much hidden?