Seed-phrase import is now live on Vultisig!
Import your old seedphrase wallets and convert them to multi-modal, multi-signature, and secure MPC wallets with just a few clicks!
It's time to throw away that old wallet.
Imagine if Vultiserver, the automatic co-signer in Fast Vault, got compromised.
What can it even do?
It holds one of two vault shares. It cannot initiate a transaction, and it cannot sign without the user joining.
A compromised co-signer still matters. But it is not a master key: it cannot move funds alone.
Reshare: the current threshold participates to add, remove or replace devices.
The vault keeps its addresses, but every share changes. Old backups stop working, so every participating device needs a fresh backup.
Create. Use. Change.
A Vultisig vault has three ceremonies. They solve three different problems:
Keygen creates it.
Keysign uses it.
Reshare changes it.
Mix them together and threshold signing sounds harder than it is. So here is the clean version.
Keygen: every device selected for the vault participates to create its share and the shared public keys.
Keysign: only the configured threshold is needed. In a 2-of-3 vault, any two participating devices can jointly produce one transaction signature.
Having @THORChain inside the wallet means swap, bond, and LP without jumping apps.
That is the point of putting it inside Vultisig instead of making people open another app for it.
A wallet can know your balances without its maker knowing you.
Most financial products turn activity into a customer profile: what you hold, when you move it, which features you use, where you hesitate.
That bargain is especially invasive in crypto. A wallet can reveal a map of someone's savings, habits and counterparties.
Vultisig collects zero data.
Your app can display your vault because the relevant information stays local. Vultisig does not need to build a behavioral record behind it.
Self-custody should include custody of your own financial behavior.
Vultisig lets you export a Vault QR so someone can view a vault's public information or verify that two devices belong to the same vault.
It cannot sign a transaction, recover funds or act as a backup.
Safe to share. Useless as a key.
$VULT utility shows up when you swap.
The standard Vultisig swap fee is 50 bps. Hold 7,500 VULT and the Gold tier removes 20 bps, leaving 30 bps before any referral saving.
The token does one simple, measurable job: it lowers what you pay.
Trading is live again on THORChain.
After more than a month offline, the network is fully back. Signing, churning, secured and trade assets, LP actions, and swaps are all up and running. The world's leading Bitcoin DEX is open for business once again.
This recovery was never about speed, it was about doing it right. Every vault verified, every keyshare checked, every step taken with security and stability as the only priority. That patience paid off, and the network came back stronger than before.
None of this happens without the people behind it. Huge thanks to the node operators who stayed online through every vote and upgrade, the devs who worked relentlessly to ship the fixes, the Maya Protocol team for keeping the lights on, and a community that didn't flinch once.
The pipeline's stacked. $XMR is coming, with native Monero swaps already working end to end in testing and a live launch on the horizon. $ZEC follows close behind. Dynamic fees, and deeper liquidity are all on the way.
THORChain got hit, held the line, and kept shipping. Same chain, same ethos, same mission.
Welcome back, Chads. Let's trade.⚡️
Which wallet action still makes you pause, even when you know exactly what you are doing?
- sending to a new address
- approving a contract
- moving to a new device
- restoring from backup
What would make that moment feel safer?
Quantum computers do not need to be practical today for wallet architecture to prepare for them.
Post-quantum signatures are already in production in Vultisig.
Security work is best done before the threat becomes urgent.
TON staking.
MayaChain bonding.
dYdX governance.
These are different jobs with different risks.
The useful part of one DeFi tab is seeing the positions together without pretending they are the same thing.
You meant to send 0.5 ETH on Ethereum.
The review screen shows:
- Amount: 0.5
- Token: ETH
- Chain: Arbitrum
Sign or reject?
What is the first detail you verify before approving a transaction?
35+ chains is the boring part.
The useful part is carrying the same signing model from Bitcoin to Ethereum to Solana, instead of rebuilding your custody assumptions every time you change networks.
Giving an AI agent a wallet is easy.
The difficult part is deciding what authority it should have after the wallet exists.
Can it check balances? Prepare a swap? Choose a route? Sign immediately? Does a human need to approve every transaction, only large transactions, or only unfamiliar destinations?
An intelligent agent can still make a bad decision, follow a poisoned instruction, or operate with assumptions its owner never intended.
That is why wallet architecture matters.
Vultisig gives builders different signing models. An agent can operate with fast execution, or a Secure Vault can keep a human device inside the approval path.
The agent provides capability.
The signing policy defines authority.
Before giving software money, write its constitution.