When I'm checking an asset on the Genius asset page, my biggest fear isn’t just limited data, but mistaking 'the whole market is moving' for 'this asset is really strong.' This pitfall is quite practical. For example, if I navigate from Discover to an asset, and see external market movements and on-chain activity changing, the price looks pretty solid. On its own, this asset seems worth further research. But if similar assets, in the same sector or even on the same blockchain, are all rising at the same time, then this signal can’t be interpreted as a unique opportunity for it. Genius, as a terminal, shouldn’t just show me the changes of this asset alone. Since the order entry is so close behind it, users can easily get misled by localized signals on a single asset page. What’s more valuable is that it should tell me: is this asset's current change an anomaly, or is it resonating with the sector? These two judgments are completely different. $ETH If the whole sector is just climbing, I won’t rush to conclusions just because it’s been rising on its own. If similar assets are stagnant, and only its external market and on-chain status are changing simultaneously, then that signal is definitely worth further observation. If the overall market sentiment is very bullish, and it’s just being pushed up along with it, I won’t consider that as a standalone strength. $BTC I’m not looking for Genius to pick coins for me. I want it to help me calibrate my reference frame on the asset page: is this signal coming from the asset itself, or is it driven by the market as a whole? Looking at a single asset can easily lead to normal fluctuations being mistaken for special opportunities. If Genius can help me differentiate between 'intrinsic changes' and 'sector resonance' on the asset page, I won’t be pushed down the rabbit hole by a seemingly strong localized signal right after entering from Discover. @GeniusOfficial l $GENIUS #genius