A Multi-Party Computation (MPC) Crypto Wallet 💜. 30K Users without Any Wallet Hacks or Drains. Don’t get drained™️

PLS/HYPE/BSC/BASE/SOL
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🛠️ Pulse Wallet Maintenance Notice Pulse Wallet will undergo scheduled maintenance for approximately 1 hour to improve the overall user experience. During this maintenance window, our team will: 🔧 Fix the "Failed to sign transaction" issue ⚡ Upgrade core system infrastructure 🛡️ Enhance security and stability Some services may be temporarily unavailable while the maintenance is in progress. We appreciate your patience and understanding as we continue making Pulse Wallet faster, safer, and more reliable for everyone. 💙 Stay tuned for an announcement once maintenance has been completed.
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✨ Week one has been about security architecture - here's the summary version: MPC distributes your key across three independent factors so no single breach is sufficient. 👉 Social login provides verified identity through platforms with their own enterprise security. 👉 Face ID and Touch ID add hardware-level biometric authentication. 👉 2FA adds an independent second channel. Background security auto-locks without delay. 👉 Open-source code means any researcher can verify the claims. 🔥 The result across 30,000 users: zero incidents, zero drains, zero hacks. That's the record as it stands. Week two starts tomorrow.
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The conventional wisdom in crypto is that you have to choose: either you use a simple wallet that compromises on security, or you use a secure wallet that's painful to operate. That tradeoff is so commonly accepted that most people don't question whether it has to be true. It doesn't. The tradeoff exists because most wallets weren't designed to solve both problems from the start - they picked one and optimized around it. 👉 Pulse Wallet started from the requirement that both had to be true simultaneously and built the architecture backward from that constraint. The result is the product you're using.
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💬 Monday question - and feel free to be specific: What's your weekend DeFi rhythm on PulseChain? Do you check your positions in the morning and leave it, actively trade throughout the day, research new protocols, or mostly just keep an eye on things without moving positions? Curious whether the community leans more toward active management or patient holding. No right answer - just interested in how everyone approaches it.
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Wallet recovery is the feature most people never think about until the moment they desperately need it. With Pulse Wallet, recovery doesn't depend on a piece of paper or a screenshot you took two years ago. Your access is tied to your identity - your Google, Apple, or X account - which itself has account recovery, phone verification, and identity confirmation built in. If you lose your phone, you get a new one, sign in with the same account, confirm your identity through Pulse Wallet's own security check, and your wallet is there. Same balance, same history, same access. The assets never moved - they were always on-chain, waiting for you.
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🚨 The research on how crypto users lose funds is consistent across every major analysis of wallet security incidents: the most common attack isn't technical - it's social. A phishing email, a fake dApp interface, a Discord DM with a wallet connect link. The attacker doesn't need to break encryption; they just need the user to type their seed phrase somewhere it shouldn't go. Pulse Wallet users don't have a seed phrase to type. There is literally nothing to phish. That's not a minor security advantage - it eliminates the single most successful attack vector in the history of retail crypto losses.
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Trust in a product like a crypto wallet doesn't come from marketing. It comes from track record over time, under real conditions, with real value at stake. 🤝 Pulse Wallet has 30,000 active users. It has operated through bull markets and bear markets, through protocol upgrades and ecosystem changes, through periods when wallet drains were hitting the broader crypto space weekly. The security record across all of that is zero incidents. That's not luck - it's what you get when the security architecture is right from the start.
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Heading into the weekend and curious about something specific: which PulseChain feature are you spending the most time on right now? Is it checking staking rewards, bridging between chains, exploring a new protocol, or something else in the ecosystem? Not asking for trading strategy - just interested in where the community's energy is focused these days. What's keeping you busy on PulseChain? 👇
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🔒 Background security in Pulse Wallet is exactly what it sounds like, and it matters more than most users expect. The moment you press home, switch apps, or let your screen go dark, Pulse Wallet locks automatically. No timer, no grace period, no 'stay logged in' option that becomes a vulnerability. If someone picks up your unlocked phone, opens the app switcher, and taps Pulse Wallet - they see the lock screen immediately, every single time. 👉 This feature has been on by default since day one because the scenario it prevents is one of the most common ways mobile wallets actually get compromised.
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The question we get most about social login is some version of 'isn't it risky to connect your Google account to a crypto wallet?' It's a fair question, and it deserves a direct answer. Your Google account is one input - one factor - in a three-factor MPC scheme. Google alone cannot access your wallet. Neither can Pulse Wallet. Neither can anyone who only has your Google password. The social account provides verified identity and one portion of a distributed key. Compromising it gains an attacker one-third of what they'd need, which is not enough. That's the math. That's why it works.
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The PulseChain community has built a real ecosystem. The protocols running here, the liquidity being deployed, the dApps being developed - these represent years of work and real economic value. That value doesn't live in a spreadsheet. It lives on-chain, protected (or not) by the wallet choices of each individual participant. Strong ecosystem infrastructure matters at the individual level. A drained wallet doesn't just hurt the user - it reduces trust, reduces liquidity, and reduces participation. Secure wallet infrastructure is, in that sense, a public good for the whole ecosystem.
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Here's how Pulse Wallet's authentication stack actually works when you open the app 👇 ✨ You authenticate via Face ID or fingerprint - device-level biometric hardware managed by Apple or Android. ✨The app cross-references your confirmed social login identity as the second factor. ✨ Background security has already been active, locking the session automatically since you last used it. ✨2FA adds an independent verification channel if enabled. Every one of these runs simultaneously, not sequentially. It's not a gauntlet - it's a parallel check that completes in seconds without you noticing any of it.
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The 12-word seed phrase is a 2013 invention built for a world where the only alternative was storing a raw private key in a file. It was better than nothing. In 2026, treating it as the security gold standard is like recommending dial-up because it worked in 2001. The ecosystem has changed. User bases have changed. The value being stored has changed. But the backup phrase hasn't. ✨ MPC is the architecture that catches up to reality - distributed key management designed for people who live in the world as it actually is, not as the 2013 whitepaper assumed it would be.
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🚨 A common misconception: security and simplicity are in tension, so you have to sacrifice one for the other. The evidence says otherwise. The most dangerous wallets aren't the ones with the weakest encryption - they're the ones that are so complicated that users make mistakes. Seed phrases are cryptographically strong but operationally fragile because humans handle them poorly under real-world conditions. 👉 Pulse Wallet is designed around the opposite premise: that security only works when people can actually use it correctly without special training.
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A question for everyone who's introduced someone to PulseChain or crypto in general: when you explained wallets and seed phrases to them for the first time, what was their reaction? We ask because those first-impression moments tell us exactly where the friction is. The things that confuse new users most are usually the things the industry has normalized but never actually fixed. What did you have to explain the most?
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🛡 Three independent security layers isn't just a product spec - it changes what 'recovery' means. In a traditional wallet, losing your seed phrase means losing your funds permanently. There's no recovery path. In Pulse Wallet, losing one of your three factors - your phone, your password, or your backup - doesn't compromise the other two. Recovery is a structured process, not a prayer. You verify identity through the remaining factors, re-establish access, and continue. This is what security architecture that respects how humans actually live looks like.
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MPC stands for Multi-Party Computation, and in the context of a crypto wallet it means one specific thing: your security key is never stored in one place. 👉 Pulse Wallet splits it across three completely independent factors. ✨Factor one is your social login - your Google, Apple, or X account with all its existing authentication. ✨Factor two is your physical device - the hardware itself, confirmed via biometrics. ✨Factor three is an encrypted backup that lives separately from the other two. To access your wallet, an attacker would need to simultaneously compromise all three systems - three completely separate attack surfaces at exactly the same moment. In practice, that's not how attacks work.
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Every week in crypto, wallet drains happen. The coverage focuses on the amount lost, but the more revealing detail is almost always the same: the vulnerability was structural, not exotic. A single exposed key. A single approved transaction. A single phishing click. The attacker didn't need to be sophisticated - they just needed one point of failure to exist. PulseChain's ecosystem represents real value built by a real community. That value deserves infrastructure designed with no single points of failure. That's the design philosophy behind Pulse Wallet.
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Running a quick community poll - pick the option that matches your honest thinking: What's your biggest concern when choosing a crypto wallet?
17% Losing my seed phrase
50% Getting hacked
17% Too complicated to use
17% Limited support & feature
6 votes • Final results
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✅30,000 users. ✅Zero hacks. ✅Zero wallet drains. That's the full security record of Pulse Wallet since launch. We say this not as marketing but as an architectural argument. The numbers reflect decisions made before a single line of the app was written: MPC over single-key storage, layered authentication over single-factor login, weekly updates over quarterly patch cycles. Security records don't happen by accident - they happen because of how you build. Ours is the evidence.
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