@Bedrock $BEAT $BR #Bedrock $H

I spent two hours on the Selini Vault documentation before depositing that Tuesday. Not skimming. The delta-neutral architecture, the capacity mechanics, the Selini Capital HFT dependency and what it means for execution risk under volatility. I had a clear position thesis before I hit Swap & Deposit.

The confirmation screen said DeFi-native yield vault. Not Selini.

I sat with that for a minute. Nothing had failed technically. I hadn't misclicked. The interface had routed based on live liquidity conditions at execution time, and those conditions pointed somewhere other than where I had spent the evening reading. The gap between the vault I studied and the vault I entered had always been there. The interface was just never going to ask me to close it.

That was the turn. Bedrock's Swap & Deposit and your own pre-entry research are running on completely separate logic. The onboarding is not working against your prep. It is just indifferent to it. Routing happens at the liquidity layer, not the intent layer, and the two systems never talk to each other before your transaction settles.

Direct vault entry flows exist inside Bedrock, but you have to step past the Swap & Deposit default on purpose to reach them. Most new depositors won't know that is an option. The onboarding experience gives them no reason to go looking, and the confirmation screen only shows you where you landed, not the distance between that and where you were reading.

This is not a design flaw. Bedrock is built to deploy capital fast with minimal friction and it delivers on that completely. The real cost is that your research and your final position can diverge without any protocol-level signal that it happened.

I now walk every trader I onboard into Bedrock directly to the vault-specific entry flow first. That step is non-negotiable in how I introduce the protocol. Two hours of reading the wrong vault documentation will do that to your habits, bet.