#genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial

Lately, I’ve been thinking about how much of crypto is really just people trying to reduce friction. Every cycle introduces a new dashboard, a new aggregator, a new terminal, yet most of them still leave traders dealing with the same problem: too much noise and too much exposure.

That’s why Genius Terminal caught my attention. Not because it promises a better interface, but because it seems focused on something I think the market has underestimated for years: the cost of showing your hand. I’ve watched enough cycles to know that execution is only part of the game. The moment your intent becomes visible, the trade has already changed.

I’m not sure yet if this approach becomes a lasting category or just another experiment. I’ve seen plenty of products look impressive before reality tested them. But I keep noticing that the conversation around onchain trading is slowly shifting away from speed and toward control. Control over where liquidity comes from, how orders move, and who gets to see them.

Maybe that’s the more interesting story here. The next wave of trading tools might not win because they are louder or faster. They might win because they quietly help users reveal less. In a market built on transparency, that feels like a surprisingly valuable direction.