#genius $GENIUS @GeniusOfficial
The longer I watch the crypto market, the more I notice one thing.
Most of the chatter revolves around profitable strategies, new narratives, and the hunt for alpha.
But way less attention is given to what hinders that alpha from being realized.
In crypto, we’re used to counting fees.
Less often do we account for the fatigue from the very infrastructure.
Multiple wallets. Different networks. Bridges. Transaction confirmations. Endless switching between services.
Each individual step looks like a minor detail.
The problem is, those minor details add up.
It might not sound too serious. But it’s these little things that form a hidden tax on the speed and quality of decisions.
That’s why I look at projects like Genius Terminal a bit differently.
For me, the question isn’t whether they’ll provide a new trading edge.
The question is whether they can cut down some of the unnecessary noise between the user and the market.
Because opportunities don’t just vanish due to analysis errors.
Sometimes they disappear because the path to hitting that button is too convoluted.
That’s why I’m paying more attention not to features, but to the amount of friction the product leaves for the user.
The longer I watch the crypto market, the more I notice one thing.
Most of the chatter revolves around profitable strategies, new narratives, and the hunt for alpha.
But way less attention is given to what hinders that alpha from being realized.
In crypto, we’re used to counting fees.
Less often do we account for the fatigue from the very infrastructure.
Multiple wallets. Different networks. Bridges. Transaction confirmations. Endless switching between services.
Each individual step looks like a minor detail.
The problem is, those minor details add up.
It might not sound too serious. But it’s these little things that form a hidden tax on the speed and quality of decisions.
That’s why I look at projects like Genius Terminal a bit differently.
For me, the question isn’t whether they’ll provide a new trading edge.
The question is whether they can cut down some of the unnecessary noise between the user and the market.
Because opportunities don’t just vanish due to analysis errors.
Sometimes they disappear because the path to hitting that button is too convoluted.
That’s why I’m paying more attention not to features, but to the amount of friction the product leaves for the user.