I used to have this bad habit in trading where I'd get jittery every time I placed a large order. Not really shaking, but I knew buying in smaller chunks was more cost-effective, yet I just couldn't bring myself to do it. When you buy slowly on-chain, it's like laying out your thought process in the public ledger. MEV bots, follow-along traps, sandwich attacks—they feast on those few seconds you expose yourself in the window. By the time you finish buying, others have already pushed the price up ahead of you.

The liquidity at each price range on-chain is limited. If you drop a big order, it'll instantly eat through all the sell orders from the current price to way above the market price, pulling the average execution price way up. Buying in chunks can smooth out the impact cost, but splitting itself sends a signal—after your first buy, your address is under watch. Follow-along bots track your trading patterns, and next time they’ll be waiting in the same price range. By the time your second batch is ready, the opposing liquidity has blocked your buying path. The result: you expose your intent but fail to buy at a cheap enough cost. In traditional finance, breaking a large order into smaller ones is a privilege of institutions—they have dark pools, iceberg algorithms, and algo trading to hide order intentions. On-chain, retail traders lack these tools; you can only choose between 'going all-in and eating slippage' or 'buying slowly and exposing intent.' Both options come with costs; the only difference is who you’re paying.

Genius did something remarkable: it brought those institutional iceberg algorithms on-chain and turned it into a one-click button. Time-weighted execution breaks your large order into dozens of smaller ones, but it’s not just a simple split—every order’s time interval is randomized. The pool takes in a small order, the price wobbles slightly, recovers, and then takes the next one. Follow-along bots see fragmented, erratic trading behavior and can’t tell if it’s a large order being executed in chunks or multiple retail traders doing their own thing. Your intent gets dissolved in randomness. Coupled with multi-path fault tolerance and pre-confirmation price locks—if one route fails, it automatically shifts to the next best option, and if the quote deviation exceeds the threshold, it halts immediately—you don’t have to worry about trades hanging in limbo, nor do you have to stress about the actual execution price deviating from your expectations. It’s not about helping you run faster; it’s about turning 'slow' from a loss into a strategy. @GeniusOfficial #genius $GENIUS