How to get started on Robinhood Chain
PANews published a Robinhood Chain walkthrough by Biteye, aimed at users approaching the network for the first time. The article says more capital has been moving into the chain in recent days, and notes that 0xsun has also returned to the meme sector and shared observations on Robinhood Chain.
The guide starts with the basic route: add the network, prepare ETH, bridge assets onto Robinhood Chain, and then complete a first swap on a decentralized exchange such as Uniswap.
Adding the network
According to the article, major Web3 wallets including the OKX Wallet and Binance Web3 Wallet already support Robinhood Chain natively, allowing users to select “Robinhood” from the network list. For wallets such as MetaMask, connecting to a dApp like Uniswap can trigger an automatic prompt to add the network.
For manual setup, the guide lists Chain ID 4663 and ETH as the currency symbol. After switching to Robinhood Chain, ETH should appear as the gas token. A zero balance at that point is described as normal until funds are bridged in.
Withdrawing ETH before bridging
The article says most exchanges do not yet support direct withdrawals to Robinhood Chain, so the route it recommends is exchange to wallet, then wallet to bridge. Using Binance as an example, users can buy spot ETH and withdraw it to a Web3 wallet address under their own control.
It stresses that the withdrawal network has to match the bridge used later. If the official bridge is used, Ethereum (ERC20) is generally the route mentioned. If a third-party bridge is used, the source chain can be selected based on bridge support, including Arbitrum or Base.
Biteye flags choosing the wrong withdrawal network as one of the most common mistakes for newcomers and suggests doing a small test first.
Bridge options and timing
Robinhood Chain is described as an L2 network with a ledger separate from Ethereum mainnet, which means users cannot send Ethereum-based assets directly to Robinhood Chain without a bridge.
The guide lists three tools:
- Arbitrum Portal: https://portal.arbitrum.io/bridge?destinationChain=robinhood-chain&sourceChain=ethereum
- Relay: https://relay.link/bridge/robinhood
- Across: https://across.to/?to=robinhood
It describes the official Arbitrum Portal as the most standard and secure option, with deposits taking about 10 minutes. Withdrawals back to Ethereum mainnet typically take around seven days because of the challenge period. Relay and Across are presented as faster alternatives.
For practice, the article suggests bridging 0.03 to 0.08 ETH first. It also warns against swapping all ETH into alternative tokens, since ETH is still needed for gas on the chain.
Making a first swap on Uniswap
Once ETH arrives on Robinhood Chain, users can trade onchain. The guide points to Uniswap or project-provided links and says users should confirm that the selected network is Robinhood Chain with Chain ID 4663.
The process described is straightforward: choose ETH in the “You pay” field, paste a token contract address into “You receive,” review the estimated output, price impact, and slippage, then approve and swap through the wallet prompt.
If the purchased token does not appear in the wallet afterward, the article says users may need to import the token manually by pasting the contract address again.
After learning the basics, the guide mentions DexScreener for charts and liquidity checks, along with GMGN and trading bots, though it says users should first become comfortable with Uniswap itself.
Which information sources the guide highlights
Biteye argues that price charts alone are not enough on Robinhood Chain, where market narratives can shift on the back of a key figure’s comment, a bio change, or a product update. To improve signal quality, the article recommends organizing X accounts into lists.
It groups the accounts as follows:
- Meme signal group: @vladtenev, @ShivVerma, @JohannKerbrat, @RobinhoodCrypto
- Ecosystem and product group: @BaijuBhatt, @abhishekf96, @SPintoPeyronel
- Announcement group: @RobinhoodComms, @RobinhoodApp
- Ignore group: @AskRobinhood, @RobinhoodApp_EU, @Robinhood_UK, and customer service accounts
In the article’s framing, the first group is where major Robinhood Chain meme narratives often begin, while the product group is more useful for tracking iteration, incubation, and protocol launches. Official announcement channels are seen as useful for timing, not early signal. Regional and service accounts are treated as low-value for meme traders.
Five meme tokens highlighted in the article
The piece says Robinhood Chain’s official narrative centers on real-world assets and tokenized stocks, but that meme coins are what currently drive attention and FOMO onchain. It splits the meme market into four categories: platform culture references, executive-driven narratives, chain-native narratives, and application or agent-linked projects.
It then names five representative assets:
- CASHCAT: around $155M market value, around $200M+ ATH, contract address 0x020bfC650A365f8BB26819deAAbF3E21291018b4. The article calls it the community’s sentiment leader and says employee bios referenced Cash Cat. It also mentions weekly gain discussions of 4000%+.
- JUGGERNAUT: around $13M market value, around $21M ATH, contract address 0xD7321801CAae694090694Ff55A9323139F043B88. The narrative is tied to Vlad and the phrase “the juggernaut.”
- HOODRAT: around $11M market value, contract address 0x8e62F281f282686fCa6dCB39288069a93fC23F1c. The guide places it in the Pepe and Matt Furie line and says 0xSun named it as one of the secondary leaders.
- VEX: around $7M market value, around $19M ATH, contract address 0x8Ff92566f2e81BDd68EDfAa8cde73942A723796b. The article says it carries AI agent and application-related elements.
- WALLET: around $5M market value, around $9M ATH, contract address 0x0339f5459FC690aC85F1782e15782A151b4A9E1b. The guide describes it as a detective-style narrative tied to employee or test wallets and warns that fake setups are also common in that category.
Risk warning
The article closes by saying Robinhood Chain is still at an early stage. Biteye adds that meme markets are highly volatile and high risk, and says the content should not be treated as investment advice.

