@GeniusOfficial I’ve spent enough years around crypto to stop getting excited every time a new platform claims it’s going to “change everything.” Most of the time, it’s the same story with different branding. A cleaner interface, a new token, a few big promises, and then months later people quietly move on to the next thing.

That’s probably why Genius Terminal stood out to me a little.

Not because I fully trust it yet. I don’t. I’ve seen too many projects look smart in the beginning and fall apart once real users start pushing through real volume. But something about this feels more grounded than the usual noise.

The biggest problem in crypto was never a lack of tools. It was always the friction between them. Wallets, bridges, swaps, approvals, failed transactions, scattered liquidity — after a while the whole experience starts feeling unnecessarily exhausting.

Genius Terminal seems to understand that. Instead of acting like another flashy trading app, it feels more like an attempt to simplify the chaos people have quietly accepted for years. Private execution, cross-chain access, aggregated liquidity — none of this is revolutionary on its own. I’ve seen versions of these ideas before. But putting them together in a way that actually feels usable is harder than most teams admit.

I’m still skeptical. I think everyone in crypto should be. But after watching so many recycled narratives come and go, I can admit when something makes me pause for a minute and pay attention.

@GeniusOfficial #genius $GENIUS