Crypto was built to remove barriers, yet many users now manage multiple wallets, bridges, chains, and interfaces just to move capital efficiently.
This raises an interesting question: has blockchain become too complex for its own users?
Projects like Genius Terminal are not trying to build another chain or exchange. Instead, they focus on hiding infrastructure complexity and creating a more unified on-chain experience.
The idea sounds simple: users care about outcomes, not constantly switching networks and managing technical processes.
But there is a trade-off. As blockchain becomes easier to use, some of its underlying mechanisms become less visible. Convenience increases, but transparency may decrease.
Perhaps the real story is not Genius Terminal itself, but what it represents: a growing shift from building more crypto infrastructure to helping people navigate the infrastructure that already exists.
If blockchain becomes increasingly invisible, how much control and visibility should users be willing to give up for convenience