The more I look at @GeniusOfficial
“private and final” execution model, the more I think it changes trader behavior in a very different way than people expect.
It slowly turns trading into reputation-following.
In normal on-chain environments, traders constantly verify execution quality themselves. They compare fills, inspect routing paths, monitor slippage behavior, and judge whether someone actually traded well or just got lucky.
But Genius Terminal removes a lot of that visible surface area.
Once execution becomes private, most users lose the ability to independently evaluate why a trade outcome happened. So instead of trusting observable execution quality, they start trusting whoever consistently appears successful inside the system.
That shifts trader coordination toward social signals:
who people follow,
whose screenshots circulate,
which wallets gain status,
which callers “feel reliable.”
And that creates a strange feedback loop.
The less visible execution becomes, the more influence shifts toward reputation layers sitting above execution itself.
At that point, traders are no longer evaluating markets directly.
They’re evaluating people who seem closest to the execution layer.
That’s why I think private terminals like Genius Terminal don’t just change execution mechanics.
They quietly change who gains power inside trading networks.
@GeniusOfficial $GENIUS #genius
