I didn't fully understand what Fogo Sessions meant until I actually used one.

The first time I connected my wallet to a Fogo app, I braced for the usual spam. You know the drill. Sign this. Approve that. Pay gas. Wait for confirmation. Do it again in 30 seconds. It's exhausting and it costs you edge when you're trying to move fast.

But Fogo Sessions killed all of that. I signed once. One message, domain verified, and I was in. After that, every trade, every swap, every interaction just happened. No pop ups. No gas fees. The app covered everything through their paymaster setup.

The security model is smarter than I expected too. The session key only works for that specific app. It expires automatically. If I'm testing something sketchy, I can set token limits so the app can only touch what I allow. It's not a blind signature, it's scoped permission with an expiration date built in.

This is what account abstraction should feel like. Web2 smoothness with Web3 ownership. I stay in full custody but the friction disappears. No SOL sitting in my wallet just to cover dust. No missed fills because I was stuck clicking approve.

Fogo Sessions rolled out quietly but it's the type of infrastructure that changes how you interact with DeFi. When the UX is this clean and the speed is already sub second, you start expecting it everywhere else. And everywhere else starts feeling slow.

The bar just moved. If your chain makes me click six times to execute one trade, I'm not sticking around.

@Fogo Official | $FOGO | #fogo