Featured Review

Mar 19, 2026
Exodus Wallet Review

Exodus is a convenience-first self-custody hot wallet for people who want to manage everyday crypto activity across desktop, mobile, and browser. It suits users who want portfolio tracking, swaps, staking, NFTs, and light web3 access in one place more than they want a security-first setup from day one. Its biggest strength is that it brings portfolio tracking, swaps, staking, NFTs, and light web3 access into one interface. Because it is still a hot wallet by default, device security, approval habits, and backup hygiene matter a lot unless you pair it with supported hardware.

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Yousra Anwar Ahmed Yousra Anwar Ahmed has published within the past 30 days.

Content Lead CryptoSlate

Author Stats

Total Reviews 50
Since Mar 2026
Last Active Apr 6, 2026
Primary Beat Crypto Wallets
Ellipal Titan 2.0 Review
Review Crypto Wallets

Ellipal Titan 2.0 Review

This Ellipal Titan 2.0 review covers a non-custodial cold wallet built for mobile-first holders who want QR-only signing and a larger screen instead of cable or Bluetooth connectivity. Its biggest strength is the larger screen, which makes on-device review clearer during QR-based offline signing. Its main trade-off is that routine use depends heavily on the phone app, and every send takes longer than it does on faster USB or Bluetooth hardware wallets.

Trezor Safe 5 Wallet Review
Review Crypto Wallets

Trezor Safe 5 Wallet Review

Trezor Safe 5 is a non-custodial USB-C hardware wallet that sits between Safe 3 and Safe 7 on price and features. The main reason to buy it is the screen: the touchscreen and haptic feedback make PIN entry, address checks, and approval screens easier than on the cheaper button-based model. Desktop and Android users get the full experience. iPhone and iPad use is limited to checking balances, buying, and receiving, so this is not the right Trezor for a fully iPhone-first setup.

Coinbase Visa Debit Card Review — Instant Virtual Card, No Annual Fee
Review Crypto Cards

Coinbase Visa Debit Card Review — Instant Virtual Card, No Annual Fee

Coinbase Card is best for someone who already uses Coinbase and wants a no-annual-fee Visa debit card for spending USD, USDC, or supported crypto. The headline appeal is simple: up to 4% rotating crypto rewards in the U.S., no staking requirement, and an instant virtual card you can start using right away. The part that needs more attention is the spend path. Using USD or USDC keeps the card cleaner, while spending non-stablecoins adds a conversion spread and can create a taxable event. Apple Pay and Google Pay support are currently U.S. - only, so the mobile-wallet experience is better in the U.S. than elsewhere.

BitPay Card Review — Fees, Limits and Waitlist Status
Review Crypto Cards

BitPay Card Review — Fees, Limits and Waitlist Status

BitPay Card is a U.S.-only prepaid Mastercard that converts crypto or USDC into spendable dollars. Load from your BitPay Wallet or a linked exchange account, and the card works anywhere Mastercard is accepted, including Apple Pay and Google Pay. New applications are paused as of 2026, so the card sits on a waitlist while existing users carry on. For those already holding the card, the terms are straightforward: no annual fee, no monthly fee, a $10,000 daily purchase limit, and merchant cash-back offers that can reach 15%. The gap is on the other side. There is no base reward on everyday spend, and a 3% foreign transaction fee makes this a poor choice for travel.

Crypto.com Visa Card Review — Up to 5% CRO Back, Prepaid Simplicity
Review Crypto Cards

Crypto.com Visa Card Review — Up to 5% CRO Back, Prepaid Simplicity

Best for Crypto.com App users who want an instant virtual card and high crypto rewards. Earn up to 5% back in CRO (Cronos); lower tiers add a foreign fee and crypto conversion costs. The Crypto.com Visa Card suits app-first users who want an instant virtual card and can actually justify a higher tier. The draw is fast CRO rewards, strong daily limits, and broad mobile wallet support in supported markets, but the value drops quickly on lower tiers. This is still a prepaid card, so the funding method matters almost as much as the reward rate. The main friction is the 3% foreign fee on lower tiers, monthly caps on some middle tiers, and the conversion spread when you top up with non-stablecoin crypto.