#genius
One thing I’ve noticed after years of watching markets is that traders rarely remember the trades that worked exactly as expected. The ones that stay with you are usually the trades where the idea was right, but the process in between somehow failed.
Maybe that is why I find infrastructure more interesting now than I did a few years ago.
Genius Terminal sits in a part of the market that most people never think about until they experience friction themselves. The conversation is usually about finding opportunities, but there is another layer beneath that: how orders move, how information spreads, and how much of your intention becomes visible before a trade is actually complete.
What stands out to me is that privacy here feels less like a luxury feature and more like a response to how on-chain markets have evolved. As participation grows, visibility becomes part of the game. Sometimes that transparency helps. Sometimes it creates noise that traders never intended to invite.
That does not mean abstraction solves everything. Every system that removes friction also asks for a degree of trust. That trade-off will always exist.
Still, it feels like the market is gradually shifting its attention from pure opportunity discovery toward execution quality. And in the long run, that transition may reveal where real trading efficiency actually comes from.
#genius @GeniusOfficial $GENIUS
