Exodus Web3 Wallet — Presentation

A concise, user-focused walkthrough of the Exodus Web3 wallet: features, security, use-cases, and resources.

Presenter: Product & Web3 Team
Format: HTML Presentation
Version: 1.0

Overview

What is the Exodus Web3 Wallet?

The Exodus Web3 Wallet is a self-custodial wallet that lets users store, manage, swap, and interact with Web3 applications across multiple blockchains. Built for accessibility and safety, it brings together portfolio tracking, swaps, staking, and dApp connectivity in a single interface.

Core Principles

Key Features

Multi-chain & Asset Support

Exodus supports a wide range of assets and networks, enabling users to manage tokens across major chains without switching wallets. The wallet abstracts complexity while giving advanced controls where needed.

Built-in Swaps, Buy & Sell

Integrated swap and buy functionality mean users can convert and acquire assets without leaving the wallet. Swap aggregation and competitive routing improve prices and reduce friction.

Portfolio & Analytics

Users get a consolidated portfolio view, price tracking, and historical performance — useful for managing risk and visualizing allocation.

Security Model

Self-Custody and Seed Phrases

Exodus is self-custodial: only the wallet holder has access to private keys and seed phrases. Users are encouraged to back up their recovery phrase securely and never share it.

Hardware Wallet Integration

For users who want higher security, Exodus integrates with hardware wallets so private keys remain offline while the UI provides management and swap capabilities.

Support & Help

Official support channels and knowledge base articles help users with backup, recovery, and troubleshooting. If a user loses access, the recovery phrase is the canonical method to regain funds.

Web3 & dApp Interaction

dApp Connectivity

The Web3 wallet acts as a bridge to decentralized apps — from marketplaces and DeFi protocols to NFT platforms. Users can connect securely and approve transactions from the wallet interface.

Use Cases

Best Practices for Users

Create Backups Immediately

Write down the recovery phrase and store it offline in multiple secure locations. Do not store your recovery phrase digitally on cloud services or screenshots.

Use Hardware Wallets for Large Holdings

Consider a hardware wallet for significant balances — this reduces exposure to phishing and device compromise.

Be Careful with dApps & Approvals

Before approving contract transactions, confirm the contract address and understand the permissions you grant. Revoke unused approvals where possible.

Official Resources & Links

Below are official Exodus resources you can include in a slide deck, documentation, or handout. Each link opens Exodus’ official pages and developer or support channels.

Tip: Use the Download link when directing users to install the wallet; the Support & Knowledge Base links are the canonical places for help articles and contact channels.

Conclusion & Next Steps

Bringing it together

Exodus Web3 Wallet aims to make self-custody approachable while providing advanced features for those who need them. For teams preparing training or onboarding materials, focus on security hygiene, backup processes, and a few live demos of swaps and dApp connections.

Get Exodus — Download