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Setup and main features of enkrypt wallet



Enkrypt wallet setup guide and main features

Initiate the process at chrome.google.com/webstore. The browser extension (Chrome, Brave, or Edge) occupies under 15MB after installation. For security, generate the recovery phrase offline–the tool provides 12 or 24 words, depending on your selection. Write these down physically; never screenshot or digitize them. The extension then asks you to confirm three random words from the sequence, a measure that prevents errors during recovery.

Once active, the primary interface displays a portfolio dashboard. It aggregates balances across Ethereum, BNB Smart Chain, Polygon, and Avalanche by default. Each network slot supports multiple addresses–create up to 10 per chain. The built-in swap module connects to 0x API and 1inch aggregators, giving you price comparisons across eight liquidity sources before you authorize a trade. Transaction fees appear in both Gwei and fiat equivalents (USD, EUR, or GBP).

For DeFi interactions, the “connect enkrypt wallet to dApp” button recognizes wallet signatures without exposing your private key to third-party sites. The extension also parses smart-contract calls: before signing, it displays the exact function name, token amount, and recipient address. This transparency stops phishing attempts where a site requests a token approval with zero limit. Disconnect from unused dApps through the “Permissions” panel–this revokes access immediately, preventing unauthorized reconnections.

Setup and Main Features of Enkrypt Wallet

Download the browser extension exclusively from the official Chrome Web Store or Firefox Add-ons site to avoid phishing clones. During creation, write down the 24-word seed phrase on paper (never digitally) and verify it by entering the prompted words in the correct order. For hardware integration, connect a Ledger Nano X via USB or Bluetooth, ensuring the "Ethereum" app is open on the device; Enkrypt will automatically detect the connected accounts without requiring separate seed imports.


This non-custodial tool offers direct swaps across 8+ networks (Ethereum, Polygon, BNB Chain, Avalanche, Moonbeam, Arbitrum, Optimism, and Bitcoin through a built-in cross-chain router) without leaving the extension interface. The default gas estimator provides three tiers–Slow (under 30 Gwei), Market (30–50 Gwei), and Fast (>50 Gwei)–with real-time Gwei suggested based on current mempool congestion. Users can batch sign transaction types (ERC-20 approvals, NFT transfers, contract interactions) in a single confirmation window, reducing click fatigue by 60% compared to sequential approvals. The integrated dApp browser supports injected Web3 and WalletConnect v2, enabling one-click connections to platforms like Uniswap or OpenSea while retaining full address management across 50+ concurrently open tabs.

How to Install and Create Your First Multi-Chain Wallet

Download the browser extension directly from the official store for your specific browser, such as Chrome Web Store or Firefox Browser Add-ons. Verify the publisher’s identity–cross-check the developer name against official project documentation to avoid phishing copies. After installation, click the extension icon and select “Create New Wallet.” You will be prompted to secure your vault with a robust password of at least 12 characters, mixing uppercase letters, numbers, and special symbols. Write down the 12-word seed phrase generated by the interface on a physical, offline medium–avoid storing it in cloud services, screenshots, or digital notes. This mnemonic is the sole backup for all derived addresses across multiple blockchains.


Confirm your seed phrase by selecting the words in the correct order from a randomized list. This step guarantees you physically recorded the sequence accurately.
After verification, the interface provides a dashboard view. Your primary account is automatically created on the Ethereum chain, but the vault is chain-agnostic, meaning it can generate addresses for Bitcoin, Polygon, BNB Smart Chain, and others without additional extensions.
To add a new chain-based account, navigate to the settings or network selector. Choose a blockchain from the supported list; each selection creates a unique public address derived from your original 12-word seed.


Familiarize yourself with the asset recovery process: if your local device fails, reinstall the extension and select “Import Wallet.” Input your 12-word seed phrase exactly as recorded to restore the entire multi-chain portfolio, including all previously generated addresses and token balances. Test this recovery flow with a minimal amount of funds–0.001 ETH or equivalent–before transferring larger sums. Regularly check the “Connected Sites” panel to revoke permissions from decentralized applications. Use hardware wallet integration for amounts exceeding $5,000 to maintain cold storage security across linked blockchains.

Q&A:
I just downloaded the Enkrypt extension. What steps do I actually need to follow to create my first wallet, and what details should I pay close attention to during setup?

When you first open Enkrypt, you are given a choice: create a new wallet or import an existing one using a seed phrase. To set up a fresh wallet, click "Create Wallet." The extension will prompt you to set a strong password—this encrypts the wallet data on your local device, so pick something you can remember but that is hard for others to guess. After that, Enkrypt will show you a set of 12 or 24 recovery words in a specific order. You must write these words down on paper and store them in a safe place, like a locked drawer or a fireproof safe. Do not take a screenshot or save them in a text file on your computer. The next screen asks you to confirm the phrase by selecting the words in the correct sequence. Once that is done, your wallet is active. A common mistake is to skip verifying the seed phrase, but doing this confirmation step ensures you wrote it down correctly—if you lose access later, those words are your only way to recover funds.

Enkrypt says it supports multiple blockchains. How do I add a custom network like Avalanche C-Chain or Polygon, and how do I switch between them later?

By default, Enkrypt shows you the Ethereum network and a few pre-configured options like BNB Smart Chain. To add another network, open the wallet and click the network selector button near the top of the interface—it usually displays the current network name. Look for an "Add Network" or "Manage Networks" option. You are then taken to a settings page where you can input the network details: the chain ID, RPC URL, symbol (e.g., AVAX for Avalanche), and block explorer URL. You can find these details on the official documentation site of the blockchain you want to add. After filling them in and saving, the new network appears in your network list. To switch networks, simply click the selector again and choose the one you need. Your wallet balance and transaction history update automatically for the selected chain. Keep in mind that each network has its own native token for gas fees—if you switch to Avalanche, you need AVAX in your wallet to send transactions, not ETH.

I transferred some ERC-20 tokens to my Enkrypt wallet from an exchange, but I don't see them in the balance. What is the most likely reason, and how can I fix it?

This is a frequent issue, and usually the tokens are not lost. The most common reason is that the token is not "visible" in the wallet's token list. Enkrypt automatically shows major tokens, but for smaller or custom tokens, you need to add them manually. Click on the "Tokens" tab within your wallet, then scroll to the bottom and find the "Import Token" or "Add Custom Token" button. You will need the contract address of the token, which you can find on a block explorer like Etherscan. Copy that address and paste it into the import field. The wallet will then scan the blockchain and detect your balance if the transfer was successful. Another possible cause is network mismatch—for example, you sent a Polygon token to your Ethereum address. In that case, you need to switch Enkrypt to the Polygon network to see that balance. Always double-check that the receiving network on the exchange matches the network you have selected inside Enkrypt before sending.

How does Enkrypt actually protect my private keys from being stolen by malware or online hackers? I want to know the technical details, not just marketing talk.

Enkrypt uses a non-custodial architecture, meaning your private keys are never sent to a server or stored in plain text. When you create a wallet, the extension derives your private key from your seed phrase using the BIP-39 standard. This key is then encrypted using AES-256-GCM with a key derived from your password (using PBKDF2 with a high iteration count). The encrypted data is saved only in your browser's local storage. Each time you need to sign a transaction, the extension decrypts the key in the browser's memory for a split second, performs the signing operation, and then clears the decrypted key from memory. Enkrypt also isolates each blockchain's key derivation path so that a dapp talking to one network cannot access keys for another network. Additionally, the wallet requests explicit user confirmation for every transaction, showing you the exact details of what you are signing—this prevents blind signing of malicious contracts. It does not store your password or seed phrase in cookies, history, or cloud sync services.

I want to connect my Enkrypt wallet to a decentralized exchange like Uniswap. What is the safest way to do that, and what signs should I look for to avoid connecting to a scam site?

First, go to the official Uniswap domain—confirm the URL is exactly `app.uniswap.org` with no extra characters or misspellings. Click "Connect Wallet" on the site, then select "Enkrypt" from the list of wallet options. A popup from the Enkrypt extension will appear asking you to approve the connection. Read the popup carefully: it shows the website's URL and the permissions requested (typically just "view" your address and "request approval" for transactions). If the site asks for unlimited token spending allowance or requests your private key directly, do not approve. After connecting, check that the network shown in Enkrypt matches the one Uniswap is using (Ethereum, Arbitrum, etc.). A known attack pattern is that fake dapps clone the real interface but inject a malicious contract. One safety habit is to always initiate a transaction from the Enkrypt interface itself—if you click "Swap" and Enkrypt opens a confirmation window, read the contract address and the amount being sent. If anything looks wrong, like a contract address you do not recognize, click "Reject." You can also disconnect the wallet after you finish trading by going to Enkrypt's settings and removing the session.