Safe & secure General Impressions wallet
Take control of your General Impressions assets with complete confidence in the Trezor ecosystem.
- Secured by your hardware wallet
- Use with compatible hot wallets
- Trusted by over 2 million customers

Send & receive your General Impressions with the Trezor Suite app
Send & receive
Trezor hardware wallets that support General Impressions
Sync your Trezor with wallet apps
Manage your General Impressions with your Trezor hardware wallet synced with several wallet apps.
Trezor Suite
Backpack
NuFi
Supported General Impressions Network
- Solana
Why a hardware wallet?
Go offline with Trezor
- You own 100% of your coins
- Your wallet is 100% safe offline
- Your data is 100% anonymous
- Your coins aren’t tied to any company
Online exchanges
- If an exchange fails, you lose your coins
- Exchanges are targets for hackers
- Your personal data may be exposed
- You don’t truly own your coins
How to GEN on Trezor
Connect your Trezor
Open a third-party wallet app
Manage your assets
Make the most of your GEN
Trezor keeps your GEN secure
Protected by Secure ElementThe best defense against both online and offline threats
Your tokens, your controlAbsolute control of every transaction with on-device confirmation
Security starts with open-sourceTransparent wallet design makes your Trezor better and safer
Clear & simple wallet backupRecover access to your digital assets with a new backup standard
Confidence from day onePackaging & device security seals protect your Trezor’s integrity
General Impressions (GI) is a decentralized execution framework designed to support the emergence of Agentic AI—systems composed of autonomous software agents that can persist over time, coordinate with other agents, and adapt their behavior as they learn. Unlike traditional AI tools such as Manus, which executes discrete tasks without memory, or n8n, which automates workflows through static rule-based logic, GI provides a fully programmable runtime for long-lived, composable, and self-evolving agents. It does this through Glint, an open-source engine written in Rust, where agents are not stateless scripts but autonomous processes capable of maintaining state onchain, coordinating with other agents via native protocols, and dynamically updating their logic mid-execution. This enables a new kind of software behavior: not one-off responses, but ongoing loops of perception, memory, reasoning, and action—functionally similar to operating systems for agents.
Rust plays a central role in GI’s design. The language’s memory safety guarantees, concurrency model, and strict lifecycle control provide the stability and performance necessary for running agents over long time horizons. GI’s architecture embraces modularity at its core: agent logic is structured as a graph, where nodes represent functional modules and edges encode control and data flows. These modules are designed to be reused and recombined, allowing developers to build complex systems from simple, interoperable components. This makes GI fundamentally different from orchestration frameworks like LangChain or AutoGen, which focus on chaining prompts or managing tools, but lack persistence, runtime coordination, or any notion of lifecycle-aware agents.
What distinguishes GI is its ability to solve the “agentic trilemma”—the challenge of building agents that are at once flexible, general-purpose, and reusable. In legacy systems, agents either reset between runs (as with Manus), or rely on external, human-managed logic (as with n8n). In GI, agents can learn and change, coordinate natively, and persist their knowledge across context switches. These capabilities are not theoretical; GI has validated them in production through its Telegram Swarm, a network of agents operating across over 330,000 Telegram groups. These agents continuously scan messages, classify sentiment, track influencer dynamics, and autonomously take actions such as posting or triggering downstream systems—demonstrating the scalability and effectiveness of GI’s runtime.
More broadly, GI addresses a critical missing layer in the AI and crypto ecosystem. While many current projects focus on agent frontends, tooling layers, or token marketplaces, GI focuses on execution—the substrate on which all agent behavior runs. Just as Ethereum became the default environment for decentralized applications by solving composable, trustless execution for contracts, GI aspires to be the default runtime for autonomous agents. It is designed for a world in which software agents will increasingly operate without constant human supervision—researching, trading, moderating, governing, and negotiating in dynamic environments. In that world, the ability to persist, coordinate, and evolve will no longer be optional; it will be foundational. GI is building the infrastructure for that world.
