Once funds split across a few hops, block explorers stop feeling like an investigation tool and start feeling like tab management.
Building ChainScope around visual context instead of raw transaction hopping. Where does your tracing workflow break first?
#buildinpublic
I'm building something I've wanted for years:
a wallet investigation tool that turns the chaos of on-chain data into a picture you can actually read.
Building it in public. Here's the why. 🧵
#buildinpublic
I'm building something I've wanted for years:
a wallet investigation tool that turns the chaos of on-chain data into a picture you can actually read.
Building it in public. Here's the why. 🧵
#buildinpublic
I'm building something I've wanted for years:
a wallet investigation tool that turns the chaos of on-chain data into a picture you can actually read.
Building it in public. Here's the why. 🧵
#buildinpublic
Less "reading a ledger."
More "seeing the case." 🔍
The goal: take investigation power that's been locked behind enterprise walls — and open it to researchers, devs, journalists, anyone.
Grounded in real forensic research. Built on open data.
#buildinpublic
I'm building something I've wanted for years:
a wallet investigation tool that turns the chaos of on-chain data into a picture you can actually read.
Building it in public. Here's the why. 🧵
#buildinpublic
So I'm making that shape visible.
Enter a wallet → watch its entire web of connections draw itself on an infinite canvas.
Wallets = nodes.
Transactions = arrows (thicker = bigger flows).
Peeling chains, fan-outs, dormant wallets waking up — they surface on their own.