#genius $GENIUS
The Problem With Crypto Tools Right Now
Most crypto apps feel like they were built by people who never actually use crypto.
Everything is bloated. Ten tabs open. Wallet disconnects for no reason. Random fees everywhere. Half the platforms look clean in screenshots then turn into a complete mess the second you actually try using them. And every project keeps yelling about “innovation” while basic stuff still breaks every other day.
People are tired, honestly.
Nobody wants another shiny dashboard with fake hype and ten influencers pretending it changes everything. Most of us just want tools that work. Fast. Private. No nonsense.
That’s probably why Genius Terminal stands out a bit. Not because the branding is loud. It’s actually the opposite. The idea of having one on-chain terminal that’s private and doesn’t feel like it’s farming your data every five seconds just sounds... normal. Which is weird now because privacy in crypto somehow became optional.
And maybe that’s the bigger issue. Crypto keeps getting bigger but the experience still feels held together with tape. Everyone talks about the future while users are still fighting wallet popups and broken interfaces at 2am trying to do one simple transaction.
At some point people stop caring about buzzwords.
They just want the thing to work.
#genius $GENIUS
The Problem With Crypto Tools Right Now
Most crypto apps feel like they were built by people who never actually use crypto.
Everything is bloated. Ten tabs open. Wallet disconnects for no reason. Random fees everywhere. Half the platforms look clean in screenshots then turn into a complete mess the second you actually try using them. And every project keeps yelling about “innovation” while basic stuff still breaks every other day.
People are tired, honestly.
Nobody wants another shiny dashboard with fake hype and ten influencers pretending it changes everything. Most of us just want tools that work. Fast. Private. No nonsense.
That’s probably why Genius Terminal stands out a bit. Not because the branding is loud. It’s actually the opposite. The idea of having one on-chain terminal that’s private and doesn’t feel like it’s farming your data every five seconds just sounds... normal. Which is weird now because privacy in crypto somehow became optional.
And maybe that’s the bigger issue. Crypto keeps getting bigger but the experience still feels held together with tape. Everyone talks about the future while users are still fighting wallet popups and broken interfaces at 2am trying to do one simple transaction.
At some point people stop caring about buzzwords.
They just want the thing to work.
#genius $GENIUS