120 terms to help you navigate the world of Web3

An AMM (Automated Market Maker) is an algorithm that enables decentralized trading by using liquidity pools and mathematical formulas to set prices automatically. Instead of matching buyers with sellers through order books, AMMs like Uniswap's constant product formula (x*y=k) let users trade against pooled assets with prices determined algorithmically based on supply and demand.

APY (annual percentage yield) in crypto represents the projected annual return on deposited assets, including compound interest. While traditional finance APYs are stable and reliable, crypto APYs are highly volatile, often inflated by token emissions that may have little value, and displayed as eye-catching numbers that rarely reflect actual realized returns after factoring in token price changes, impermanent loss, and gas fees.

What if you could trade Bitcoin for Ethereum directly with someone, peer-to-peer, with no exchange, no custodian, and zero trust required? That's an atomic swap—and it's one of crypto's most elegant ideas that nobody uses.

Buy low on one exchange, sell high on another, pocket the difference. Sounds like free money, but price differences exist for reasons.

An altcoin is any cryptocurrency that isn't Bitcoin—from major platforms like Ethereum to meme coins. Most are garbage, but a few drive real innovation.

Search engines that index and display every transaction, address, and smart contract on a blockchain—transforming raw data into readable insights.

A sustained period of rising prices driven by optimism and FOMO—learn the four phases and how to profit without becoming exit liquidity.

Bridges connect blockchain's fragmented ecosystem, enabling asset transfers between chains—but they're also crypto's biggest security nightmare with $2B+ stolen.

Bear markets destroy weak hands but create generational buying opportunities—where real wealth is built through accumulation.

Blockchain transactions are cryptographically signed messages verified by thousands of computers—permanent, unchangeable records that no authority can reverse.

A cryptocurrency is digital money that runs on blockchain technology without banks or governments—turns out you CAN create money on the internet if you're clever enough with math.

A crypto wallet doesn't actually store your crypto—it stores the secret keys that prove you own it. Confusing? Yes. Important? Absolutely.

Collateral in crypto refers to digital assets you deposit into a DeFi protocol to secure a loan. Unlike traditional finance where you might put down 20% for a mortgage, DeFi requires overcollateralization—depositing 130-200% of what you're borrowing. This protects lenders since there are no credit checks, but it means you can get automatically liquidated if your collateral's value drops too low.

Cold wallets keep your private keys completely offline, making them virtually unhackable. If you're holding significant crypto long-term, this is how you protect it.

A crypto airdrop is the free distribution of tokens or NFTs directly to users' wallets, typically used as a marketing strategy, reward for early adopters, or method to distribute governance tokens to community members.

Decentralized finance (DeFi) is the attempt to rebuild every financial service—lending, borrowing, trading, insurance—on blockchain without intermediaries. It's attracted over $200 billion and survived spectacular hacks, regulatory threats, and the infamous 'food coin' craze.

A decentralized exchange (DEX) is a peer-to-peer marketplace where traders swap cryptocurrencies directly through smart contracts without a centralized intermediary. Unlike exchanges like Coinbase or Binance that custody your funds, DEXs let you trade from your own wallet, maintaining control of your private keys. This eliminates custodial risk but shifts all responsibilityand riskto you.

DEX is crypto shorthand for decentralized exchange—peer-to-peer trading platforms like Uniswap where you swap tokens directly from your wallet without giving up custody. This guide covers how to actually use DEXs, common mistakes to avoid, and tools like 1inch that find you the best prices.

Organizations controlled by smart contracts and token holders, not CEOs. DAOs enable coordination without trust or central authority.

dApps are applications running on blockchain through smart contracts instead of centralized servers—promising censorship resistance but trading simplicity for complexity.

EIPs are the democratic blueprints that guide Ethereum's evolution - from token standards like ERC-20 to protocol upgrades like EIP-1559. Understanding EIPs means understanding how decentralized governance actually works.

The electrical outlet of crypto—the standard that lets thousands of tokens work seamlessly across wallets, exchanges, and DeFi protocols.

The EVM is a global computer that anyone can use but nobody can shut down. It's slow, expensive, and weird—and it powers hundreds of billions in financial applications. Here's why.

A programmable blockchain that executes smart contracts and dApps without intermediaries, powering DeFi with $80B+ locked.

Front-running bots extracted over $1.4 billion from traders in 2023 by seeing transactions in the mempool and jumping ahead—here's how this invisible tax works.

Borrow millions with no collateral, use it, and repay within seconds—or the transaction reverses like it never happened.

FOMO is the anxious feeling that everyone else is getting rich except you, driving impulsive decisions. It's the single most expensive emotion in crypto.

When you send a Bitcoin transaction, it's not really 'done' for an hour. An Ethereum transaction? 13 minutes. Solana? Seconds. Understanding finality is understanding why, and what could go wrong.

FUD is a tool—sometimes legitimate concerns, other times manipulation. The ability to distinguish noise from signal separates successful investors from emotional traders.

Uniswap held a vote to distribute $1 billion. Only 2.5% of token holders participated. This is crypto governance—theoretically democratic, practically plutocratic.

When gas costs $50 for a simple transaction, every wasted operation is real money. Gas optimization is the obsessive art of making smart contracts cheaper, one opcode at a time.

Governance tokens grant holders voting rights over decentralized protocols, enabling DAOs to make decisions through token-weighted voting on upgrades, fees, and treasury spending.

Gas fees are transaction costs for blockchain operations. In 2025, they're 95% cheaper than before—learn how to save even more.

Imagine buying a token, watching it 10x, then realizing you can't sell. That's a honeypot contract - one of crypto's cruelest scams. Here's how they work and how to avoid them.

Hot wallets store your crypto online for convenience, but $3.8 billion was stolen from hot wallets in 2022. Here's why they're both essential and dangerous.

A drunken typo turned crypto philosophy—HODL means surviving brutal volatility for massive long-term gains. Simple strategy, superhuman discipline required.

The InterPlanetary File System (IPFS) is a peer-to-peer network protocol designed to make the web faster, safer, and more open by storing and sharing files based on content rather than location.

Impermanent loss is the difference between holding tokens in your wallet versus providing them as liquidity to an AMM pool. When token prices diverge from initial deposit ratios, the AMM's constant product formula automatically rebalances your position, causing you to underperform simple holding. A 2x price change causes ~5.7% IL, while 5x creates ~25.5% IL—and it's called 'impermanent' only because it disappears if prices return to original ratios (they rarely do).

Intents represent a fundamental shift in how we interact with blockchain: instead of spelling out every transaction step, you just tell the system what you want to achieve. Solvers compete to find the best path forward.

A liquidity pool is a smart contract holding reserves of two tokens that enables decentralized trading on automated market makers (AMMs). Liquidity providers deposit token pairs, earn trading fees, but face impermanent loss—where price changes can leave them worse off than simply holding the assets.

A lending protocol is a DeFi platform that facilitates cryptocurrency lending and borrowing through smart contracts without traditional financial intermediaries. Protocols like Aave and Compound let you deposit crypto to earn interest (often 3-15% APY on stablecoins) or borrow against your holdings by providing overcollateralized assets as security—with everything managed automatically by code including interest rates and liquidations.

Liquidity mining is the practice of distributing protocol tokens to users who provide liquidity, stake assets, or use DeFi services. Pioneered by Compound in 2020, liquidity mining bootstrapped billions in DeFi liquidity by offering token incentives. But most reward tokens dumped 90%+ as mercenary capital rotated between protocols chasing the highest emissions.

Layer 2 solutions handle transactions off-chain for 10-100x better throughput and costs dropping from $50 to $0.10, while still inheriting Layer 1 security.

Liquidity Bootstrapping Pools (LBPs) are specialized automated market makers that help crypto projects launch tokens with fairer price discovery and better distribution. Unlike traditional token sales, LBPs use dynamic weights to discourage speculation and reward patient buyers.

Minting an NFT means creating a new token on a blockchain that represents ownership of something—digital art, music, video, or collectibles. It's like publishing a book with an ISBN, except you're registering your unique item on a public, permanent blockchain ledger that proves ownership and authenticity.

MEV is profit extracted by controlling transaction ordering in blockchain blocks—through sandwich attacks, front-running, and arbitrage, extracting $7 billion+ from users since 2020.

Multisig wallets require multiple approvals to move funds—a security model that protects billions in DAO treasuries and protocol funds from single points of failure.

Market cap seems like the definitive measure of a crypto's size, but it's deeply misleading and hides as much as it reveals.

A market order executes instantly at current prices—guaranteeing speed but sacrificing price control, often costing you 3-10% through slippage.

Non-fungible tokens (NFTs) went from obscurity to $40 billion in sales in 2021, then crashed 90%+ by 2023. Beyond the hype and crash, NFTs are blockchain tokens representing unique digital itemswith both legitimate use cases and serious problems nobody talks about.

Nodes are the invisible computers that make blockchain work—thousands of independent machines worldwide each maintaining their own copy, validating every transaction, with no single one in charge.

Optimistic rollups assume transactions are valid by default, processing hundreds off-chain and giving 7 days to prove fraud—cutting Ethereum fees by 90-95%.

Oracles are the bridges between blockchain's isolated world and external reality. They feed smart contracts the data they need to function - from asset prices to weather data to sports scores - making blockchain useful beyond self-referential applications.

Permissionless means anyone, anywhere can use the system without asking permission. It's why crypto exists, why it's powerful, and why governments fear it.

Protocols acquire permanent liquidity they control forever—pay once through bonding, own it permanently. It's buying a house versus renting.

A cryptographic key derived from your private key that can be shared publicly, enabling others to send you crypto and verify transactions without revealing your secret.

A private key is a secret number that proves you own cryptocurrency—lose it and your funds are gone forever, with no password reset.

A global computational lottery where miners compete to guess winning numbers, burning massive energy to secure Bitcoin without central authority.

Rug pulls have stolen over $10 billion from crypto investors. They're the industry's dirty secret, and they happen every single day. Here's everything you need to know to protect yourself.

Wake up with 100 tokens. Check your wallet—now you have 110. Nobody sent them. Your balance just... changed. Welcome to rebase tokens.

Rollups process hundreds of transactions off-chain, then bundle and compress them into a single Ethereum transaction—reducing costs by 10-100x while maintaining security.

Restaking is a crypto capital efficiency innovation that allows you to use already-staked assets (like staked ETH) to secure additional blockchain networks and services simultaneously. Instead of your staked crypto earning one yield stream, restaking lets it work across multiple protocols at once—earning multiple reward layers while maintaining your original staking position. EigenLayer pioneered this concept in 2023, and by early 2025 restaking protocols collectively manage over $18 billion in assets.

Real World Assets (RWA) represent traditional financial assets like real estate, bonds, and commodities on blockchain networks. They're bridging the gap between DeFi's 24/7 programmable markets and the $900 trillion worth of real-world value that's historically been locked in traditional finance.

Staking is the process of locking cryptocurrency in a proof-of-stake network to help validate transactions and secure the blockchain. In return, stakers earn rewardstypically 3-15% annually depending on the network. But staking isn't risk-free: your funds are locked, you face slashing penalties for misbehavior, and smart contract bugs can drain your stake.

A smart contract is a self-executing program stored on a blockchain that automatically enforces an agreement when predetermined conditions are met. Despite the name, they're not artificially intelligent and often aren't legally binding contractsjust code that runs exactly as written, for better or worse.

Slippage tolerance is your maximum acceptable price difference between when you submit a DEX trade and when it executes on-chain. Set it to 0.5% and your trade reverts if price moves more than 0.5% unfavorably while pending. Set it to 5% and your trade will complete even if you get a terrible price—but MEV bots will sandwich attack you, extracting that 5% for themselves. It's a fundamental trade-off in decentralized trading: fail safely with low tolerance or complete trades at potentially awful prices with high tolerance.

Sandwich attacks are the most sophisticated form of front-running, placing your transaction between two bot trades to squeeze maximum profit from your trade.

Smart contract audits find bugs and vulnerabilities before deployment—but they're not foolproof, as the $1.8 billion in hacks of audited protocols in 2023 proves.

Total Value Locked (TVL) represents the total dollar value of cryptocurrency deposited in a DeFi protocol. It became DeFi's most important metric for measuring protocol adoption and health—reaching over $180 billion at peak—but it's also easily manipulated through recursive lending, double-counting, and token price inflation that makes TVL both useful and deeply misleading.

Token burning is the permanent removal of cryptocurrency from circulation by sending it to an unrecoverable address, creating deflationary pressure that can theoretically increase the value of remaining tokens.

A project gives founders 50% of tokens with no vesting. That's not a red flag—it's a giant flashing neon sign saying 'RUG PULL.' Here's how to read allocations.

Tokenomics—the economics of how a token works—determines whether a crypto project has any shot at long-term success or is just a casino chip.

Tokens are programmable digital assets on blockchains representing anything valuable—standardized, portable, and composable like Lego blocks for value.

Utility tokens provide access to specific products or services within blockchain platforms. A utility token is only as valuable as the utility it provides.

USDT is the largest stablecoin with $95B in circulation, dominating crypto trading despite transparency concerns and reserve controversies.

A validator is a node operator who stakes cryptocurrency to participate in block production and transaction verification on proof-of-stake blockchains. Validators must lock capital as collateral, maintain high uptime, and follow protocol rules or face slashing penalties that burn their stake.

Vesting is a time-based token release mechanism that gradually distributes cryptocurrency to holders over a predetermined period, preventing immediate sell-offs and aligning long-term incentives between teams, investors, and communities.

Web3 is the vision of a decentralized internet where users own their data, identity, and digital assets instead of renting access from Big Tech platforms. Built on blockchain technology, it promises to shift power from corporations to usersthough critics argue it's just blockchain rebranding with extra steps.

A wrapped token is a cryptocurrency asset from one blockchain represented as a tokenized version on another blockchain, maintaining 1:1 value parity with the original asset while enabling cross-chain functionality and interoperability.