Big cross-chain trades always get caught; let’s chat about the ghost orders of @GeniusOfficial .

A couple of days ago, my buddy Da Qiang was venting about how large cross-chain funds got sniped by MEV bots again, and the slippage was brutal. This is a common issue with DeFi's public ledgers. I happened to be checking out Genius, so I discussed it with him. The core of this thing is driven by MPC technology and Ghost Orders to counteract MEV.

Da Qiang asked how this differs from mixers. I told him this isn’t the same game. Railgun offers pure anonymity by mixing up all the addresses. Genius, on the other hand, is designed for professional players, offering compliant privacy. When you place a large order, the system splits the trade into hundreds of intermediary wallets. The trading intent is completely invisible on-chain before execution, so bots can't get their teeth into it, while also retaining auditability, which is very appealing to institutions.

In practice, Genius has created a unified terminal. It consolidates over ten chains like Solana and more than a hundred DEXs. No need to switch wallets or use cross-chain bridges; it works with stablecoin usdGG for sub-second execution. The built-in limit and stop-loss orders minimize friction for large capital, making it much more user-friendly than standard aggregators without privacy.

But I warned Da Qiang not to jump in blindly. Although the cross-chain privacy narrative is enticing, the project is still in its pre-launch phase. Right now, there’s no real data on cross-chain MEV avoidance rates to validate it. No matter how hyped the product is, it depends on whether the high-frequency team is willing to move. I plan to keep an eye on the real on-chain trading volume before deciding whether to get involved. #genius $GENIUS $BNB