Menese Protocol has drawn fresh attention after posting a short demonstration on X showing the sale of $GOOGLX on Raydium, one of Solana’s better-known decentralised exchanges. On the surface, the trade itself was unremarkable. What caught interest was the way it was executed, with Menese positioning the process as a single-click experience that removes several steps traders have come to accept as routine.
Anyone who has used decentralised platforms regularly will recognise the usual pause before a trade goes through. There are questions around which wallet to connect, which network is active, how much to sell, and why another approval window has appeared. Menese argues that these moments add unnecessary friction, particularly as users spread activity across multiple chains.
In the clip shared on X, Menese shows all balances visible in one place, across chains, before the transaction is executed. The trade is completed without switching wallets or moving between interfaces. According to the team, this is possible because execution happens at the protocol level, with Internet Computer technology handling the logic behind the scenes while the trade itself runs on Solana. Support for Ethereum is planned to follow the same pattern.
The idea of simplifying cross-chain activity is not new, and the space is already crowded with wallets and aggregators promising smoother experiences. Menese’s approach stands out by leaning on protocol-level execution rather than browser extensions or repeated user prompts. Supporters say this could reduce errors and make decentralised trading less intimidating for users who are active on more than one network.
There are, however, open questions. One-click execution places a great deal of trust in the underlying protocol, and some traders prefer explicit confirmations as a safeguard. Others will want to see how the system performs under heavier use, and how it handles edge cases such as failed transactions or rapid price movement. Security audits, transparency around permissions, and clear user controls will likely shape how quickly confidence builds.
For now, Menese’s demonstration offers a glimpse of what a more streamlined decentralised experience could look like, particularly as activity continues to fragment across chains. Whether this approach becomes widely adopted will depend less on how slick it appears in a demo and more on how reliably it performs in everyday trading.
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