@GeniusOfficial
In trading systems like Genius Terminal, the real challenge is not only giving users access, but managing what happens after access is granted.

Many traders move between devices, change networks, and place large orders quickly. From a system point of view, this can look like risk behavior. So security layers may respond by slowing or restricting actions. The problem is not the restriction itself, but how unclear it feels to the user when it happens.

A good terminal experience is not just about fast onboarding or smooth login through Google, email, or wallet methods. Those things only remove the first barrier. The real product value starts after login, when users are actively trading and need to understand their limits in real time.

If an order is paused, users should know why. If a recovery window exists, it should be clearly shown. If some actions like viewing assets or managing approvals are still available, they should remain accessible even during partial restrictions. Without this clarity, users start guessing, and in crypto, guessing creates stress and wrong decisions.

The direction Genius Terminal is aiming at is combining fast market access with clearer state visibility. Not just showing prices and tokens, but also showing system status in a way that traders can actually understand and trust while they operate in fast-moving markets.
#genius $GENIUS