gnosis guild 𒆙 pfp
gnosis guild 𒆙
@gnosis-guild
Zodiac Pilot gives web3 its first true rehearsal space: simulation forks built on Tenderly's virtual testnet, simulation forks let you preview and compose multi-step onchain interactions in an industry-first sandbox environment.
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gnosis guild 𒆙 pfp
gnosis guild 𒆙
@gnosis-guild
Pilot's simulation forks let you test and preview onchain interactions as if they've already happened, without sending a single transaction. it's a rehearsal in a local web3 sandbox. here's how it works ↓
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gnosis guild 𒆙 pfp
gnosis guild 𒆙
@gnosis-guild
every time you approve a tx, Pilot: πŸ”Έhijacks the RPC call πŸ”Έsimulates the tx locally πŸ”Έspoofs the result back to the dapp from the app's perspective, the tx really happened. but nothing actually hits the chain.
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gnosis guild 𒆙 pfp
gnosis guild 𒆙
@gnosis-guild
because of this process, you can keep adding txs into a bundle without executing. Pilot will maintain a local fork of chain state, simulating arbitrarily large sequences and returning the results back to the app as if real. πŸ‘€
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gnosis guild 𒆙 pfp
gnosis guild 𒆙
@gnosis-guild
when the bundle's ready, you can submit the entire interaction flow as one atomic transaction. no repeated approvals. no scrambling for signatures. just a clean rehearsal β†’ confident execution.
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gnosis guild 𒆙 pfp
gnosis guild 𒆙
@gnosis-guild
from an EOA perspective: – simulate, review, and execute when ready – no constant MetaMask popups from a multisig perspective: – signers coordinate once – trivial approvals don't clog workflows – huge productivity unlock
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gnosis guild 𒆙 pfp
gnosis guild 𒆙
@gnosis-guild
Pilot doesn't just simulate transactions. it gives you space to compose intent, test assumptions, and align execution with judgment. rehearse before you commit. then execute like you mean it. https://pilot.gnosisguild.org
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