Have you ever been active on-chain?
Then it's worth checking this site.
https://t.co/SReRjXcAfk
~ 181,000 ETH is hidden in forgotten smart contracts that most trackers never display.
Some of it may be tied to an address you control.
No wallet connection required.
@arkham Wow, that’s a load! There’s still ETH sitting in abandoned smart contracts from early Ethereum days.
Some of it is technically still retrievable depending on contract state.
We built a scanner for it.
Most people assume that if a protocol died, the value inside it disappeared too.
That's often not the case.
Across hundreds of legacy Ethereum contracts, there are still withdrawable balances, unclaimed refunds, and dormant positions tied to wallets that haven't checked in years.
The hardest part isn't finding opportunities.
It's remembering where to look.
https://t.co/tlCBSJ5lud shut down in 2020.
15,126 addresses still have 633.46 ETH sitting in the contract.
One address alone has 169 ETH claimable.
Most portfolio trackers don't show it
There’s still ETH sitting in abandoned smart contracts from early Ethereum days.
Some of it is technically still retrievable depending on contract state.
We built a scanner for it.
@DefiIgnas this is less about leverage being “bad” and more about how incentive loops in perps reward short term survival over consistent risk management.
@lookonchain@GarrettBullish position rotation like this usually matters more than the PnL itself
it’s about how risk is being reallocated across assets.
@wallstreetbets@cz_binance tokenization always sounds like a clean narrative, but the real challenge is how existing market structure and liquidity actually map onto new onchain rails without breaking what’s already there