How to Add a Custom Network to Your Wallet (MetaMask, Trust Wallet, etc.)
Ethereum is only the beginning. Many blockchains—BNB Chain, Polygon, Arbitrum, Avalanche, Fantom, Base—use the EVM standard, which means they work with MetaMask and other non-custodial wallets.
But these networks are not pre-installed, so users must add them manually or through trusted tools.
This guide teaches you exactly how to add networks safely.
1. Why You Need to Add Networks Manually
Wallets like MetaMask only come with:
- Ethereum Mainnet
To use:
- Binance Smart Chain (BSC)
- Polygon
- Arbitrum
- Optimism
- Base
- Avalanche C-Chain
…you must add their RPC settings.
2. What Are RPC Settings?
RPC stands for Remote Procedure Call — your wallet needs these details to connect to a blockchain.
Each network has:
- Network name
- RPC URL
- Chain ID
- Currency symbol
- Block explorer URL
These must be 100% accurate.
3. How to Add a Custom Network (Manual Method)
Step 1
Open MetaMask → Settings → Networks → Add Network.
Step 2
Enter RPC details (example: BNB Chain)
Network Name: BNB Smart Chain
RPC URL: https://bsc-dataseed.binance.org/
Chain ID: 56
Symbol: BNB
Block Explorer: https://bscscan.com
Step 3
Save → Network added.
4. How to Add Networks Safely Using Chainlist
Manual entry is risky because scammers publish fake RPCs.
The safest method:
- Go to https://chainlist.org
- Search for your network
- Click Add to MetaMask
- Confirm in wallet
Chainlist ensures all RPC endpoints are verified.
5. Preventing Network Spoofing Attacks
Fake networks can:
- Redirect your transactions
- Show fake balances
- Intercept wallet data
- Trick you into signing malicious transactions
To stay safe:
✔ Never use RPCs from Telegram
✔ Never trust unverified websites
✔ Always verify Chain ID matches the official one
✔ Only use Chainlist or the official chain website
6. Common Networks You Should Add
BNB Chain
Cheap fees, large ecosystem.
Polygon
Fast, low-cost transactions.
Arbitrum
Most popular Ethereum Layer 2.
Optimism
Fast-growing Layer 2.
Base
Coinbase-backed L2 network.
Avalanche
DeFi and gaming.
7. Final Takeaway
Adding networks to MetaMask is simple but must be done safely.
- Always use official RPCs
- Prefer Chainlist for automatic verification
- Never copy RPCs from random guides
- Double-check Chain IDs
- Be cautious with unknown networks
This ensures your wallet remains secure as you explore multiple ecosystems.
🎉 Article 13 Completed
✅ Article 14 — Understanding EIP-712 Message Signatures (And When They Are Dangerous)
Category:Tools & Resources → Wallet & On-chain
Length:≈1500 words
Understanding EIP-712 Message Signatures (And When They Are Dangerous)
EIP-712 is a standard for typed message signatures used widely in Web3. Airdrop tasks, DeFi interactions, NFT mints, and login systems often rely on it.
But many scams also abuse EIP-712 to trick users into signing approvals that drain their wallets.
This guide explains:
- What EIP-712 is
- Why signatures exist
- Which signatures are safe
- Which signatures are dangerous
- How to avoid malicious requests
1. What Is EIP-712?
EIP-712 is a method of signing structured messages that humans can read before approving.
Instead of showing you long unreadable hex strings, EIP-712 displays:
- What app is asking
- What action is being requested
- What the message contains
This helps users understand what they are signing.
2. Why Are Message Signatures Needed?
dApps need signatures for:
- Logging in without a password
- Approving on-chain actions
- Verifying wallet ownership
- Executing transactions
- Accessing secure features
Signatures prove:
“This action was initiated by the wallet owner.”
3. Types of Signature Requests
Safe Examples
✔ Login to a platform
✔ Verify wallet ownership
✔ Sign non-transactional messages
✔ Participate in simple airdrop tasks
These do NOT move your funds.
Dangerous Examples
❌ Token approvals (spender = unlimited)
❌ “Permit2” approvals
❌ NFT approvals (SetApprovalForAll)
❌ Swap execution previews
❌ Signature requests from unknown dApps
These CAN move your funds or give unlimited access.
4. How Scammers Use EIP-712
Scammers create fake:
- Airdrop websites
- NFT mint pages
- DEX frontends
- Discord/Twitter links
They trick users into signing a “harmless approval” that actually:
- Grants full token access
- Grants unlimited spending
- Allows draining assets instantly
5. How to Read EIP-712 Messages
Always check:
✔ App Domain
Does the domain match the real project?
✔ Requested Action
Does it ask for:
- Approval?
- Spending?
- Permission changes?
✔ Spender Address
Unknown → dangerous.
✔ Token Symbol
Fake pages often show blank or incorrect token names.
6. How to Protect Yourself
✔ Rule #1 — Never sign what you don’t understand
If unsure → reject.
✔ Rule #2 — Always verify URL
Fake sites are the #1 cause of signature scams.
✔ Rule #3 — Use a burner wallet for risky tasks
Never use your main wallet.
✔ Rule #4 — Revoke approvals regularly
Use Revoke.cash.
✔ Rule #5 — Use a hardware wallet
Even if you sign something dangerous, hardware wallets help prevent silent actions.
7. If You Signed a Dangerous Message
Immediately:
⚠️ Move your funds to a new wallet
New seed phrase → new wallet.
⚠️ Revoke approvals on old wallet
Then stop using it.
⚠️ Do NOT trust any “recovery tool” websites
They are scams.
8. Final Takeaway
EIP-712 signatures are essential for Web3 but also frequently abused.
- Safe signatures → Login/authentication
- Dangerous signatures → Approvals & spending permissions
If the signature request looks suspicious:
Reject first. Ask questions later.
Your wallet’s safety depends on the clicks you make.