Rabby Wallet adds support for Robinhood Chain
According to Techub, citing CryptoBriefing, the open-source wallet Rabby Wallet has integrated Robinhood Chain, making it one of the main wallets to support the emerging Layer 2 network. The integration was announced on July 3, only a few days after the chain’s mainnet launch, indicating a relatively fast response from wallet infrastructure providers.
In practical terms, wallet integration is one of the earliest signals that a new network is becoming usable for a wider set of on-chain participants. For Robinhood Chain, Rabby’s support gives users another established option for managing assets, switching networks, and interacting with applications built on the chain. For the wallet sector, the move also reflects a willingness to cover new demand quickly when a network begins attracting market attention.
Robinhood Chain is positioning around tokenized RWAs and stock tokens
Robinhood Chain is an EVM-compatible Layer 2 blockchain launched by Robinhood. Its stated focus is on tokenized real-world assets and tokenized stocks, placing it in a segment of the market that connects on-chain infrastructure with regulated or traditional asset exposure. That positioning differentiates it from general-purpose network launches that rely primarily on broad ecosystem narratives.
EVM compatibility is a meaningful detail because it reduces the integration burden for wallets, tooling providers, and other infrastructure services. As a result, support from external platforms can emerge more quickly than on non-EVM networks. Rabby Wallet’s integration fits that pattern and serves as a concrete example of early infrastructure alignment around Robinhood Chain.
Wallet providers are moving early as infrastructure coverage expands
Before Rabby Wallet’s announcement, Trust Wallet and SafePal had already disclosed support for Robinhood Chain. The fact that multiple wallet providers have moved to add the network in close succession suggests that the chain is being treated as relevant enough to include in standard wallet coverage, especially during its earliest phase.
For new chains, wallet support is often one of the most important components of ecosystem bootstrapping. Without it, user onboarding, asset visibility, and routine on-chain activity face immediate friction. The additions by Rabby Wallet, Trust Wallet, and SafePal do not by themselves prove long-term adoption, but they do show that infrastructure providers are recognizing user interest and are prepared to support access to the network’s on-chain finance use cases.
Based on the information currently available, the most defensible takeaway is straightforward: Robinhood Chain is beginning to build out its wallet-layer infrastructure quickly, and major wallet brands are already participating in that process. That makes the latest Rabby integration notable as part of a broader early-support trend rather than as an isolated product update.

