I made a five-figure swap on-chain, intentionally breaking it down into three smaller transactions executed over time. In the end, the third transaction got precisely hit by a sandwich attack. Reviewing the on-chain records, I realized: the first two small trades already revealed the direction and rhythm. A large transaction is like waving a sign saying, 'Hey MEV, I'm here, please sandwich me.' Last year, on-chain MEV attacks caused users to lose over $900 million, with sandwich attacks accounting for over 60%. Your probing trades aren't testing the waters; they're training MEV to recognize your patterns. I switched between three different aggregators, but the results were the same—1inch routing exposes your intentions more accurately, CoW Swap does alleviate MEV but the trading intent is still visible on-chain. You're changing the interface, not the underlying logic; the problem isn't the price, it's the intent being seen. The Ghost Orders for @Genius Terminal aren’t about finding a smarter aggregator but changing the execution logic: splitting large orders into hundreds of independent execution units, completed one by one through a temporary wallet. On-chain trackers only see scattered operations and can't piece together a complete picture. This is protecting trading intent, and it’s fundamentally different from price optimization. When you switch aggregators, you’re solving the fee issue; Ghost Orders are solving the visibility issue. Genius Bridge Protocol takes cross-chain operations to the backend, with over ten chains accessible from a single entry point—no need to manually search for bridges or repeatedly sign. It’s the first product on-chain to execute privacy at the terminal level. The platform has processed over $3 billion, and Hyperliquid perpetual contracts are now integrated. The GENIUS token is evolving from fee discounts to privacy functionality staking and governance participation. CZ's endorsement and YZi Labs' investment have brought attention, but Ghost Orders are the soul of the product. Token distribution and unlocking rhythms still need observation; privacy execution doesn't equal absolute anonymity, and multi-chain interactions increase security risk exposure. Next time I do a large execution, I don't want to wave a sign and be the center of attention anymore.
$BTC $ETH
$GENIUS
#GENIUS
$BTC $ETH
$GENIUS
#GENIUS