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<br><br><br>img width: 750px; iframe.movie width: 750px; height: 450px; <br>Setup core wallet extension guide for beginners<br><br><br><br>Setup core wallet extension guide for beginners<br><br>First, download the software from its official repository, such as the source code on GitHub, to avoid fake versions. Verify the checksum of the downloaded file using tools like SHA256 to confirm file integrity before installation. This step is critical to prevent malware disguised as a legitimate application.<br><br><br>During the tutorial, the import wallet function is the next step. Choose the JSON file or 12/24-word recovery phrase option. Do not use a cloud-stored seed phrase; write it on a metal backup plate stored in a safe location. The application will decrypt the file locally, which means no sensitive data is sent over the network during this guide for the setup process.<br><br><br>For the final configuration, set a strong password for session encryption and choose the desired network (e.g., mainnet vs. testnet) from the dropdown menu. Sync the blockchain data incrementally, committing only to a pruned node option if disk space is limited (e.g., 10 GB or less). This approach grants you full control over transaction signing without reliance on third-party servers.<br><br>Setup Core Wallet Extension Guide for Beginners<br><br>First, install a compatible browser plugin from the official store–for example, the Avalanche or MetaMask plugin. To create wallet, click “Create a new vault” during the initial launch, generate a 12 or 24-word mnemonic phrase, and store it offline on paper or in a hardware device. Never screenshot or type this phrase into any website. After creation, immediately test your backup by restoring the vault from the phrase; this confirms you can recover access later.<br><br><br>Import wallet by selecting “Import using recovery phrase” in the plugin’s welcome menu. Paste or type your 12–24 word seed phrase exactly, with single spaces between each word and all lowercase.<br>Set a strong, unique password (minimum 8 characters, mix of letters, numbers, and symbols) for daily browser access. This password encrypts the local vault file.<br>After importing, verify the derived public address matches your original address from another interface via a blockchain explorer (e.g., checking your transaction history).<br><br><br>Tutorial approach: download the plugin from the official Chrome Web Store or Firefox Add-ons page, never from random links. For import wallet from a private key, open the plugin settings, select “Import Account,” paste the raw private key (starts with “0x” on EVM chains), and label it (e.g., “Trading”). Keep this key offline before importing–only expose it during this single paste action. After the create wallet process, immediately transfer a tiny test amount (e.g., 0.001 AVAX) to the new address and confirm its arrival before moving larger sums. Always use a hardware wallet like Ledger for any folder storing more than $100 equivalent of assets; link it via the plugin’s “Connect Hardware” option.<br><br>How to Download and Install the Core Wallet Extension from the Official Chrome Web Store<br><br>Open the Chrome Web Store directly by typing `chrome.google.com/webstore` into your address bar. In the search field at the top left, type "Avalanche" and press Enter. From the results, locate the listing titled "Avalanche Wallet" – verify the publisher is "Ava Labs, Inc." and that the user rating is above 4 stars with over 10,000 reviews. Avoid any copycat add-ons with similar names.<br><br><br>Click the "Add to Chrome" button on the right side of the listing. A pop-up dialog will appear listing the permissions the program requires, such as reading and changing data on websites you visit. Review these carefully; the only permission necessary for transaction processing is access to `chrome-extension://` URLs. Click "Add Extension" to confirm the download. The file is approximately 8 MB and downloads in under 10 seconds on a standard broadband connection.<br><br><br>Once installed, a new icon (a white "A" on a purple background) will appear in the toolbar to the right of your address bar. If you do not see the icon, click the puzzle piece icon in the toolbar to open the extensions menu, then pin the Avalanche application to your toolbar by clicking the pin icon next to it. Without pinning, the program remains active but its interface stays hidden until you manually access the extensions menu.<br><br><br>Click the pinned toolbar icon to launch the interface. Your first screen will offer two options: "Create Wallet" and "Import Wallet." For a fresh start, choose the first option. A 12-word recovery phrase will be generated on screen – write this down on paper, verify each word is spelled correctly, and never store it on a connected device, screenshot, or cloud service. This phrase is the only method to restore funds if your browser data is removed.<br><br><br>If you already possess a secret recovery phrase from a previous installation or another application like MetaMask, select the second option. Paste your 12 or 24-word phrase into the provided box, entering each word in lower case with single spaces between them. After this step, set a strong password (minimum 12 characters with a mix of letters, numbers, and symbols) to encrypt the local storage on your machine. This password protects your keys only on this specific browser–it does not replace or recover your seed phrase.<br><br><br>After completing either the creation or import process, the main dashboard will load immediately. Check that the network indicator in the top-left corner shows "Mainnet" before sending any assets. For safety, always test a small transaction first, then verify the value matches your expected balance after the transfer is confirmed. This entire tutorial, from download to the first funded address, takes roughly three minutes to execute.<br><br>Q&A: <br>I downloaded the core wallet extension but I see a long string of letters and numbers. Is that my wallet address, and can I share it publicly?<br><br>Yes, that string is your public wallet address. It functions like an email address for cryptocurrency—anyone can send funds to it, and it's safe to share it publicly. However, keep your private key (sometimes called a seed phrase) completely secret. Your private key is like the password to your bank account; anyone who has it can move your funds. Many beginners confuse the address with the private key. A good habit is to write your private key down on paper and store it in a secure place, not on your computer or phone.<br><br>I installed the wallet extension, but it keeps asking me to "set a password." Why do I need a password if I already have a private key?<br><br>The password is a local security feature, not part of the blockchain itself. It encrypts your wallet file on your specific device. Each time you open the extension, you enter this password to decrypt your private key and access your funds. This protects your wallet if someone else sits at your computer. If you lose this password, you won't lose your coins—you can re-import your wallet using your seed phrase on another device. But without the seed phrase, losing the password means losing access permanently. Choose a strong password you can remember, or save it in a password manager you trust.<br><br>I want to test the wallet before putting real money in. Is there a "test network" I can use, and how do I get free test coins?<br><br>Yes, most core wallet extensions allow you to switch from the main network (often called "Mainnet") to a test network (like "Testnet" or "Ropsten" depending on the blockchain). Test networks are exact copies of the live blockchain but use worthless test tokens. To get free test coins, you search for a "faucet" for that specific test network. A faucet is a website or bot that sends small amounts of test currency to your public test address. For example, if you switch to Ethereum's Sepolia testnet, you can find a Sepolia faucet. Once you have test coins, practice sending a transaction to a friend's test address or a second wallet you control. This lets you learn the fee structure and confirmation times without any financial risk.<br><br>It took 20 minutes for my first transaction to show up. Is something broken, or is this normal?<br><br>This is normal for many blockchains, especially older ones like Bitcoin or Ethereum. Transactions are not instant—they are grouped into "blocks" by miners or validators. The time depends on network congestion and the fee you attached. If you set a low fee to save money, your transaction waits in a pool (the "mempool") until a miner picks it up. Some wallets show a status like "pending" or "unconfirmed." You can speed it up using a feature called "Replace-by-Fee" (RBF) if your wallet supports it, which lets you resend the transaction with a higher fee. For faster confirmation, always check a fee estimation site before sending. With newer blockchains like Solana or Polygon, confirmations are often under a minute, but the [https://Extension-web3.com/core.php Core Wallet Edge extension] wallet you installed might be for a slower network. Check which blockchain your wallet is designed for—it makes a big difference in speed.<br>
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