If you're going to use cryptocurrency, for anything, whether that's buying, investing, or depositing at a platform like Duelbits, you need to understand what a crypto wallet actually is and how it works. Not just vaguely, but in enough detail to make the right decisions about security, convenience, and which wallet suits your situation.
This guide covers everything from the fundamental mechanics through to the practical setup steps.
A crypto wallet is software or hardware that manages the cryptographic keys needed to access and control cryptocurrency on a blockchain.
Here's the most important thing to understand from the start: your cryptocurrency does not live inside your wallet. It never has. Your Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, or any other coin exists on the blockchain, a distributed global ledger that records every transaction ever made with that currency. The wallet doesn't hold the coins. It holds the key that proves you own them.
Think of it this way. Your crypto wallet is less like a physical wallet full of banknotes, and more like the key to a safety deposit box in a vault that anyone in the world can verify but only you can open. The box (and everything in it) exists in the vault. Your wallet holds the key.
To understand wallets properly, you need to understand two terms: private key and public key.
Your public key, often displayed as your wallet address, is the string of letters and numbers you share when you want someone to send you cryptocurrency. It's like your bank account number. Anyone can send funds to it. Knowing your public key doesn't give anyone access to your funds.
Your private key is the cryptographic proof of ownership that authorises transactions from your wallet. It's the master password. Whoever controls the private key controls the funds. This is why private key security is everything in cryptocurrency, unlike a bank password, there is no "forgot my password" option and no bank to call.
Most modern wallets don't make you manage a raw private key directly, they generate a seed phrase (also called a recovery phrase or mnemonic) instead. This is a list of 12 or 24 common English words in a specific order, generated when you set up the wallet.
The seed phrase is your ultimate backup. If your phone breaks, your laptop dies, or your app is deleted, entering your seed phrase into any compatible wallet app restores your entire wallet and all the funds associated with it. Conversely, if someone else gets hold of your seed phrase, they have complete access to your funds from anywhere in the world, instantly.
The most important rule in crypto: Write your seed phrase on paper, store it somewhere physically secure (a fireproof safe or similar), and never:
No legitimate platform, including Duelbits, will ever ask for your seed phrase.
There are several ways to categorise crypto wallets. The most useful distinctions for practical purposes are hot vs cold and custodial vs non-custodial.
| Hot Wallet | Cold Wallet | |
|---|---|---|
| Connection | Always online | Offline |
| Convenience | Very high | Lower |
| Security risk | Higher (online exposure) | Lower |
| Best for | Regular transactions | Long-term storage |
| Examples | MetaMask, Trust Wallet, exchange wallets | Ledger, Trezor |
Hot wallets are connected to the internet. This includes:
They're convenient for frequent use because sending and receiving happens instantly through an internet connection. The security trade-off is real: an internet-connected device is a device that can potentially be compromised.
Cold wallets store your private keys entirely offline. Hardware wallets (Ledger, Trezor) are small USB-like devices that sign transactions internally without your private key ever touching an internet-connected environment. Even if the computer you plug them into is infected with malware, your keys remain isolated on the device.
Cold wallets are the gold standard for securing significant amounts of cryptocurrency long-term. The inconvenience trade-off, physically approving every transaction on the device, is worth it for holdings you don't need to access frequently.
This distinction is arguably more important than hot vs cold for everyday practical security.
A custodial wallet is one where a third party holds your private keys on your behalf. Exchange wallets are the most common example, when you buy Bitcoin on Coinbase and leave it in your Coinbase account, Coinbase holds the private keys. You access your funds through your Coinbase account login, not through direct key control.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
The phrase "not your keys, not your coins" is the crypto community's shorthand for this risk. If the exchange is hacked, goes bankrupt, or freezes your account, your ability to access your funds depends entirely on that company's situation and your jurisdiction's legal protections.
A non-custodial wallet gives you direct control of your private keys, no third party is involved. MetaMask, Trust Wallet, Phantom, and hardware wallets like Ledger are all non-custodial.
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Most experienced crypto users operate with a combination: a non-custodial wallet for holdings they want to control directly, and an exchange wallet for active trading or frequent transactions.
Within the hot wallet category, there are several distinct formats:
Smartphone apps that store your private keys on the device itself. Popular options include Trust Wallet (supports 10 million+ assets), Exodus (beginner-friendly, multi-currency), and Phantom (Solana-focused). Convenient for everyday use, including sending crypto to platforms like Duelbits.
Wallet software that integrates directly into your web browser (Chrome, Firefox, Brave). MetaMask is the dominant example. They're designed specifically for interacting with DeFi applications and Web3 platforms. MetaMask supports Ethereum and any EVM-compatible chain.
Applications installed on your computer. Offer more features than mobile wallets and are suitable for users who prefer to manage crypto from a desktop environment. Exodus and Electrum (Bitcoin-focused) are widely used.
The balance you hold inside a crypto exchange account. Technically custodial, the exchange holds the keys. The most practical option for buying crypto and immediately sending it elsewhere, such as to your Duelbits deposit address.
Hardware wallets are physical devices that store your private keys in a secure offline chip. The two most established providers are Ledger (Nano X, Nano S Plus) and Trezor (Model T, Model One).
How they work in practice:
The critical security advantage: even if your computer is infected with keyloggers or malware designed to steal crypto, the private key is never transmitted to the internet and cannot be extracted. Hackers who compromise your machine get nothing usable.
Who should use a hardware wallet: Anyone holding cryptocurrency worth more than they would be comfortable losing to a device compromise. A common starting point is moving to hardware wallet storage once holdings exceed $1,000-$2,000, though many experienced users use them for any amount they don't plan to spend in the near term.
When using Duelbits, there are three main ways to handle your crypto:
The most straightforward path for new users. Buy cryptocurrency on a major exchange (Coinbase, Binance, Kraken), then send it directly from your exchange balance to your Duelbits deposit address. The exchange functions as your custodial wallet for the funds in transit.
Maintain your cryptocurrency in a non-custodial wallet (Trust Wallet, MetaMask, Exodus) and send from there to your Duelbits deposit address when you want to play. Gives you full control of funds until the moment of deposit.
Our built-in Buy Crypto feature (powered by MoonPay) lets you purchase crypto with a card directly within Duelbits, your ETH deposit address is pre-filled automatically and funds land directly in your Duelbits balance. No external wallet management required.
For complete step-by-step deposit instructions for all 13 supported cryptocurrencies, see our deposit and withdrawal guide.
Crypto wallet security has no equivalent safety net to bank fraud protection or credit card chargebacks. When funds leave a wallet, whether through your action or someone else's, the transaction is permanent and irreversible. That makes the following practices genuinely critical, not just best practice:
What is a crypto wallet? Software or hardware that stores the private keys used to access and control cryptocurrency on a blockchain. The wallet doesn't hold coins, it holds the key that proves you own them.
What's the difference between a hot and cold wallet? Hot wallets are internet-connected (mobile apps, browser extensions, exchange balances), convenient but more exposed. Cold wallets store keys offline (hardware devices like Ledger or Trezor), more secure, less convenient for frequent use.
What is a custodial wallet? A wallet where a third party (usually an exchange) holds your private keys. You access funds through an account login, not direct key control. More convenient but dependent on the platform's security and solvency.
What is a non-custodial wallet? A wallet where you hold your own private keys directly. No third party controls your funds. Complete security responsibility lies with you, if you lose your seed phrase, there is no recovery option.
What is a seed phrase? A list of 12 or 24 words that is the master backup for a non-custodial wallet. Anyone with this phrase can restore your wallet and access all its funds. Write it on paper, store it securely offline, and never share it with anyone.
Do I need a crypto wallet to use Duelbits? You need cryptocurrency to deposit. You can use an exchange wallet, a self-custody wallet, or the built-in Buy Crypto feature (via MoonPay) to purchase crypto and have it deposited directly to your Duelbits balance.
Is my Duelbits balance a wallet? Your Duelbits balance is a custodial wallet, Duelbits holds the keys associated with your balance. When you deposit, funds move to Duelbits' custody. When you withdraw, they return to a wallet address you control.