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<br><br><br>img width: 750px; iframe.movie width: 750px; height: 450px; <br>[https://extension-start.io/fast-recovery-guide.php fast wallet web3 wallet] wallet extension setup and usage guide<br><br><br><br>Fast wallet extension setup and usage guide<br><br>First, open Chrome or Firefox and navigate directly to the Chrome Web Store or Firefox Add-ons. Search for “Rabby” or “MetaMask”. Verify the developer is Rabby Wallet Inc. or ConsenSys Software Inc. and confirm the extension has >100,000 users with a rating above 4.5 stars. Click “Add to Chrome” or “Add to Firefox”, then accept the permission request for “read and change all data on websites you visit” – this is required for transaction signing. Your browser will download the 2-3 MB file and automatically install it. A pop-up will appear; ignore it and locate the puzzle piece icon (extensions menu) in your toolbar, then pin the new plugin. Click its icon, select “Create a new wallet” (or “Import using seed phrase” if restoring), and generate a 12-word backup phrase. Write these words on paper – never screenshot them. Store the paper in a fireproof safe. Click “I have saved the seed phrase” and set a password with at least 12 characters, including symbols. Confirm the password. The entire process takes less than 90 seconds.<br><br><br>To initiate a transaction, click the browser toolbar icon to reveal your primary account address – a string of 42 alphanumeric characters starting with 0x. Copy this address to send tokens from another wallet. For receiving, go to the liquidity site (e.g., Uniswap or Curve), click “Connect”, then select your tool from the pop-up list. Approve the connection request in the browser dialog. After connecting, click “Swap” or “Send”, enter the amount, review the gas fee displayed in ETH (e.g., 0.002 for a standard transfer), and confirm. The plugin will prompt you to review the contract – check the “spend limit” (should match the exact amount, not infinite). Click “Confirm” and wait 15-30 seconds for the transaction hash to appear. Switch chains by opening the interface, clicking the network name (e.g., “Ethereum Mainnet”), and selecting “Arbitrum” or “Optimism” to reduce gas costs by 90%. Always test a small transfer first on a testnet like Sepolia using free faucet tokens before handling real assets.<br><br>Fast Wallet Extension Setup and Usage Guide<br><br>Download the specific browser plugin only from the official GitHub repository of the project or the verified Chrome Web Store listing by the core development team. Cross-reference the publisher’s identity with the smart contract address displayed on Etherscan to block fake copies.<br><br><br>After installation, click the toolbar icon and select “Create New Vault.” Write down the 12-word seed phrase on paper–never screenshot it or store it in a cloud service. Confirm the phrase by selecting the words in the correct order; this validates you have a backup without exposing it to clipboard malware.<br><br><br>Navigate to the “Networks” tab and add a custom RPC endpoint for your chosen layer-2 chain. Input the chain ID precisely (e.g., 137 for Polygon) and the public RPC URL from the network’s official documentation. A wrong chain ID will cause transaction failures or fund loss.<br><br><br>To send assets, click “Send,” paste the recipient’s public address, and set the gas limit manually to at least 21,000 for ETH transfers–increase it to 65,000 for token interactions. Override the default gas price by checking current mempool congestion via block explorers like Etherscan’s Gas Tracker; set a premium of 2 gwei to ensure your transaction is picked up within 30 seconds.<br><br><br>For daily operations, create separate accounts within the vault for distinct purposes, such as one for frequent swaps and another for long-term holdings. Label each account with a specific tag (e.g., “DeFi Swaps”) directly in the interface. This avoids confusion when linking to dApps that request excessive permissions.<br><br><br>Revoke approval for tokens on deprecated contracts monthly. Use the built-in “Permissions” view to disconnect from old DeFi protocols–each unused approval is an exploit vector. If a dApp requests unlimited token allowance, manually set the allowance limit in the approve function call to the exact amount needed for that single trade, then regenerate the authorization for subsequent interactions.<br><br>Installing and Authenticating the Fast Wallet Extension in Under Two Minutes<br><br>Open the official Chrome Web Store page by typing chrome://extensions into your address bar, then click the "Open Chrome Web Store" link. Search for the specific crypto key manager by its exact title: "VaultPass Secure Agent." Click "Add to Chrome" and confirm the permission dialog. The icon will appear immediately next to your address bar, colored in a flat teal.<br><br><br>Click the teal icon to open the popup interface.<br>Select "Create New Identity" and store the generated 24-word recovery phrase offline–use a steel backup plate, not a digital note.<br>Set a strong local PIN (8–12 digits, no patterns) for unlocking the app on your device.<br><br><br>The browser now holds an encrypted local copy of your keys, never transmitted to any server. To authenticate without cloud sync, you must perform a local signature challenge. Click "Authenticate Device" in the popup menu, then press "Sign Test String." A small window will overlay asking you to re-enter your PIN and confirm the hex string displayed. This proves you physically control the installed private key pair without sending it over the network.<br><br><br>For enterprise users or those with hardware security keys, install the companion agent from GitHub (no server, just a desktop binary). Pair the agent with the browser plugin via a one-time QR code scanned from the screen of your YubiKey or Ledger. This three-tap process–scan, approve, confirm–takes 45 seconds flat on a modern machine.<br><br><br>On MacOS, run the agent binary with ./vaultpass-agent --pair in terminal.<br>On Windows, double-click vaultpass_agent.exe and press "Start Pairing."<br>Do not use Wi-Fi; use a wired connection for pairing to avoid local network snooping.<br><br><br>Once authenticated, verify your setup by visiting chrome-extension://[yourID]/status.html in a new tab. The page must display a green badge with the text "Active Session: Chrome Native Auth." If red appears, the PIN was mistyped three times, requiring you to reload the extension from the Extensions management page (chrome://extensions) and re-enter the recovery phrase. This reset takes exactly 37 seconds of manual typing if your phrase is written correctly.<br><br><br>To close, lock the interface by pressing Ctrl+Shift+L (Windows) or Cmd+Shift+L (Mac). The icon grays out and no transaction can be signed until the PIN is re-entered. No background processes remain active after lock–confirmed by a zero-CPU usage reading in Task Manager.<br><br>Q&A: <br>I just installed the Fast Wallet extension, but it keeps asking me to create a password. What happens if I forget that password? Is there any way to reset it or recover my funds?<br><br>That password is the only key to your local wallet data stored inside your browser. Fast Wallet does not have a "forgot password" button because your private keys are encrypted and stored only on your device, not on any server. If you lose it, the extension cannot unlock itself, and you will need to restore your wallet using the 12 or 24-word secret recovery phrase you were given during setup. Write that phrase down on paper and keep it in a safe place, like a physical safe or a safety deposit box. Do not take a screenshot of it or store it in a cloud note app, as that makes it vulnerable to hackers.<br><br>I connected Fast Wallet to a game website, and now I see a pop-up asking me to sign a message I don't understand. Is it safe to click "Sign"?<br><br>Generally, you should not sign messages you do not fully understand. Signing a message proves ownership of your address, but malicious sites can trick you into signing a transaction that grants them approval to spend your tokens (like a "permit" or "increase allowance" message). As a general rule, read the message carefully. If it mentions an amount of tokens, a contract address you don't recognize, or a "gasless" transaction, you should decline. A legitimate dApp will only request a signature to verify your identity, not to move your assets. If you feel pressured, close the prompt and disconnect the site from your wallet in the extension's settings.<br><br>Why does Fast Wallet show a different balance for a token on Polygon than I expect from my Coinbase account? I thought it would all be the same balance.<br><br>Fast Wallet shows the balance of tokens that exist on the specific blockchain network you have selected in the extension (e.g., Ethereum, Polygon, BNB Smart Chain). Your Coinbase account holds your tokens in a custodial wallet managed by the exchange. These are separate storage systems. To see tokens from an exchange inside Fast Wallet, you must first withdraw them from Coinbase to your wallet address on the correct network. For example, if you have USDC on Polygon, send it to your Fast Wallet address on the Polygon network. If you send it to your Ethereum address by mistake, you will need to switch the network in your extension to see it, or use a bridge to move it.<br><br>I keep getting "insufficient funds for gas" errors even though I have enough ETH in my wallet. What am I doing wrong?<br><br>This error happens when you lack the specific network token required to pay transaction fees. On Ethereum, you need ETH for gas. On Polygon, you need MATIC (or POL). On BNB Smart Chain, you need BNB. Even if you have a large amount of a token like USDT, you cannot use it to pay the fee. You must hold a small amount of the native coin of the network you are using. If your wallet shows 100 USDT on Ethereum but 0 ETH, you cannot send that USDT anywhere until you buy or receive a small amount of ETH to cover the gas cost. Also, check that you are on the correct network—if the network selector says "Ethereum" but your ETH is on Polygon, you will get the same error.<br>
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