Yesterday in the group, someone missed out on a hot launch on the Base chain just because they didn't have enough ETH for gas fees. Frustrated, he shouted: 'I've got tens of thousands in my wallet, but because I lack the necessary ETH for transaction fees, I got completely stuck. The chain has zero tolerance for the poor.' I'm all too familiar with this kind of madness; I've got four EVM chains and a Solana Yielder, and every day I'm either stacking gas or on the way to buy gas. We're all living like cross-chain beggars.
Most cross-chain protocols only solve the 'how to get there,' but very few actually tackle the awkwardness of 'once you arrive, can you take the first step?' As I revisited the whitepaper @GeniusOfficial , section 3.2 discusses the design of the 'Gas Tank,' which is arguably the most 'internet product'-like feature in the entire system: the protocol directly integrates native token reserves, deducting gas fees from the vault for cross-chain transactions, so you don’t have to prepare various native tokens from each chain as fuel.
Behind this lies the orchestration wallet's external running logic. When you initiate a transaction on any supported chain, the orchestrator first deducts USDC from the vault asset pool, automatically converting it into the corresponding chain's gas fee, handling everything for you. What you're facing is the asset itself; all the other friction gets absorbed by the system.
More importantly, the token $GENIUS connects this 'frictionless payment' directly to the economic loop. The whitepaper’s appendix mentions: holding the token allows you to enjoy fee discounts. Cross-chain call protocols are already more expensive than simple swaps, but now, the higher your seating rank, the lower the gas costs you automatically pay each time. Every bit of ETH or SOL you save essentially becomes liquidity subsidies earned through token rights. $BTC
In the old world where gas is a barrier, the assets are there, but you can’t move an inch. But when gas is treated as a service that the protocol absorbs, you only need to focus on what you want to buy. This might just be the missing piece that DeFi has been lagging behind for too long. DYOR. #genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial
Most cross-chain protocols only solve the 'how to get there,' but very few actually tackle the awkwardness of 'once you arrive, can you take the first step?' As I revisited the whitepaper @GeniusOfficial , section 3.2 discusses the design of the 'Gas Tank,' which is arguably the most 'internet product'-like feature in the entire system: the protocol directly integrates native token reserves, deducting gas fees from the vault for cross-chain transactions, so you don’t have to prepare various native tokens from each chain as fuel.
Behind this lies the orchestration wallet's external running logic. When you initiate a transaction on any supported chain, the orchestrator first deducts USDC from the vault asset pool, automatically converting it into the corresponding chain's gas fee, handling everything for you. What you're facing is the asset itself; all the other friction gets absorbed by the system.
More importantly, the token $GENIUS connects this 'frictionless payment' directly to the economic loop. The whitepaper’s appendix mentions: holding the token allows you to enjoy fee discounts. Cross-chain call protocols are already more expensive than simple swaps, but now, the higher your seating rank, the lower the gas costs you automatically pay each time. Every bit of ETH or SOL you save essentially becomes liquidity subsidies earned through token rights. $BTC
In the old world where gas is a barrier, the assets are there, but you can’t move an inch. But when gas is treated as a service that the protocol absorbs, you only need to focus on what you want to buy. This might just be the missing piece that DeFi has been lagging behind for too long. DYOR. #genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial
我再也不想凑Gas了
0%
这才是真正的基础设施
50%
这个体验降级太致命
50%
2 votes • Voting closed