How to Set Up Your First Crypto Wallet (Step by Step)
A wallet you control is simpler to set up than it sounds. The only part that really matters is what you do with the seed phrase.
№ 002GuideCrypto for Beginners: A Calm, Honest Roadmap to Your First Steps
A warm, no-hype guide to crypto for beginners. What it actually is, the few names worth knowing, how to start tiny, wallet basics, and the real risks nobody likes to spell out.
№ 003GuideWhere to Buy Cryptocurrency (and How to Actually Trade It Without Getting Burned)
A plain-English walkthrough of where you buy crypto, how to swap one coin for another, and why most beginners should hold instead of trade.
№ 004GuideHow to Set Up a Hardware Wallet and Actually Use It
A hardware wallet is the biggest security upgrade most people can make. How to set one up and actually use it right, from the seed phrase to verifying every address.
№ 005GuideHow to Spot a Crypto Scam Before It Drains You
The market's warming up and so are the scammers. How to spot a crypto scam before it drains you: guaranteed returns, urgency, seed-phrase asks, and fake links.
№ 006GuideCustodial vs Non-Custodial Wallets: Which One Do You Actually Need?
One holds your keys for you. The other puts them entirely in your hands. Here's how to pick without overthinking it.
№ 007GuideHow to Buy Your First Cryptocurrency (Step by Step)
No jargon, no hype. Just the steps I'd walk a friend through if they wanted to buy crypto for the first time this week.
№ 008GuideHow to Protect Your Crypto From Bridge Hacks (After This Week's $4.67M Reminder)
After this week's $4.67M bridge exploit, here's how to actually protect your crypto: bridge less, hold cold, revoke approvals, split wallets, and slow down.
№ 009GuideWhat Is a Seed Phrase, and How Do You Keep It Safe?
Your seed phrase is the master key to your crypto. Lose control of it and you lose everything. Here is how it works and how to protect it.
№ 010GuideHot Wallet vs Cold Wallet: Which Should a Beginner Actually Use?
One is convenient, one is fortress-secure. Most beginners need both. Here is when to use which, in plain English.