The real opponent in on-chain large transactions isn't slippage; it's your own transparency. Many people think that when it comes to large on-chain trades, the biggest fear is slippage. But that's not the case. You can calculate slippage, split orders, and choose pools with deep liquidity. What really costs you money is that every move you make is being broadcasted live.
I had a lesson once: I bought a mid-cap coin in two separate transactions on a certain chain. The total amount wasn’t particularly large, but it was enough to draw attention. After I completed the second buy and it hadn’t been confirmed yet, I noticed that an address was following me. Later, when I wanted to offload, the price was always taken down just before my order went live. It wasn’t a coincidence; someone was watching my address and taking opposite actions.
This kind of thing doesn’t happen on CEXs because the order book is opaque; others can’t see your order intentions. But on-chain is inherently transparent; your wallet address is your ID, and all actions are recorded on the blockchain. For small traders, it doesn’t matter, but as soon as your position gets a bit larger, transparency becomes a burden.
Later, I started using the privacy execution feature of @GeniusOfficial . The principle is simple: it breaks down a single transaction into many smaller ones, executing them through different paths. What outsiders see are a bunch of unrelated small transactions, making it impossible to deduce your real intentions and total position.
After using it for about two weeks, the most noticeable effect was: the execution price stabilized. It’s not that every trade is perfect, but that feeling of being "clearly targeted" disappeared. For me, that’s enough.
Some might say, isn’t this just a different term for a mixer? Not really. Mixers hide the source of funds, addressing the "where did the money come from" issue. Genius hides the trading behavior itself, tackling the "what are you planning to do next" issue. One is post-factum concealment, and the other is preemptive protection; the logic is completely different.
My current habit is: for small amounts, I can trade anywhere, but whenever it involves rebalancing or any significant position changes, I will prioritize using the terminal of $GENIUS . It’s not faith; it’s an instinctive choice made after being taught a lesson.
The rules of the game on-chain are simple: information asymmetry equals profit. If you can’t protect your information, you’re just giving away money to others.
#genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial