Exodus Web3 Wallet

Presentation: What Exodus is, how Web3 integration works, security and UX, and practical tips for users and teams. (Office-friendly, Times New Roman, 10pt)

1. Executive summary

What is Exodus Web3 Wallet?

Exodus is a multi-platform, non-custodial crypto wallet that provides a unified Web3 experience across mobile, desktop and browser extension. It combines portfolio management, an integrated Web3 browser/dApp connector, swap functionality, staking and optional hardware-wallet integration to secure private keys. The wallet focuses on approachability for new users while offering powerful tools for experienced crypto holders.

2. Key features

Multi-chain support (h3)

Exodus supports dozens of blockchains and hundreds to thousands of individual assets. That lets users manage BTC, ETH, SOL and many more tokens in a single interface without juggling separate wallets.

Web3 & dApp access (h3)

Built-in Web3 browser and WalletConnect support let users connect to DeFi applications, NFT marketplaces and other decentralized apps directly from Exodus mobile or the browser extension.

Self-custody + hardware support (h3)

Private keys are stored locally and encrypted on the user’s device. Exodus also supports integration with hardware wallets like Ledger and Trezor for enhanced cold-key storage.

3. Security model

Local encryption & recovery

Exodus encrypts private keys on-device and displays a recovery phrase during wallet setup that the user must store securely. Exodus emphasizes that users are responsible for storing their recovery phrase; losing it usually means losing access to funds.

Hardware wallet integration

For users who want additional protection, Exodus integrates with Ledger and Trezor devices — the private keys remain on the hardware device while Exodus provides a friendly UX for managing assets and signing transactions.

4. User experience & design

Beginner-friendly flows

Exodus is known for its polished visual design and straightforward onboarding. The app uses charts and human-readable labels to simplify portfolio tracking, swaps, and staking operations for newcomers.

Advanced tools

At the same time, the wallet exposes trade routing for swaps, token approvals for dApps and network selectors for power users, making it suitable for more advanced Web3 interactions.

5. Typical use-cases

Everyday portfolio management

Tracking holdings, checking balances, viewing price performance, and managing simple send/receive operations.

Interacting with DeFi

Connecting to DEXs, lending platforms, yield farms, and NFT marketplaces through the Web3 browser or WalletConnect bridges.

Safeguarding large holdings

Using Exodus with a hardware wallet to hold larger amounts offline while still benefiting from Exodus’s interface for viewing and initiating transactions.

6. Limitations & considerations

Self-custody responsibilities

Because Exodus is non-custodial, users must safely store recovery phrases and private keys. Exodus cannot restore access if a user loses their recovery phrase.

Hot wallet risks

As a software (hot) wallet, devices connected to the internet are more exposed than cold storage. For large holdings, combine Exodus with a hardware wallet.

7. Practical tips for presentations & demos

Demo checklist (h4)

  1. Prepare a demo wallet with small test balances (testnets if possible).
  2. Show the Web3 browser connecting to a simple dApp and explain WalletConnect vs extension.
  3. Demonstrate a swap and show routing/fees so audiences understand trade mechanics.
  4. Highlight the recovery phrase flow and how a hardware wallet changes the signing process.

Design note

Use screenshots, live demos, and a step-by-step walkthrough. Emphasize safety best practices (never share your recovery phrase) and show how to verify correct URLs and dApp permissions.

8. Suggested slide structure (10 slides)

Slide-by-slide outline

  1. Title & tagline — "Exodus Web3 Wallet: Safe, colorful, and easy access to Web3"
  2. Executive summary
  3. Key features (multi-chain, Web3 browser)
  4. Security model (local encryption, hardware support)
  5. UX highlights & sample screens
  6. Live demo steps
  7. Risks & mitigation
  8. Business/enterprise offerings (WaaS, passkeys, integrations)
  9. Q&A prompts
  10. Resources & links

9. Resources & links (10 colorful links)