Light ’em
up.
Pick a tracer, lock onto your exchange, and pull the trigger. We build the tx with your exchange written into the metadata; you sign. The tracer slips in, never comes out, and lights up every wallet it touches.
Sending a tracer to your exchange is one-way. The exchange credits the ADA that rides with it to your account, but the tracer token itself is lost and unrecoverable.
This is why a mint is a batch of 50: do not send them all to one address at once. Spread them, and they fan out across more of the exchange's wallets.
If your exchange lets you generate a fresh deposit address, do it and send tracers to several. A new deposit address may be served by a different aggregation wallet, so more of the consolidation layer lights up.
Send in batches over days, not all at once. Deposits get swept on different schedules into different hot and cold wallets, so staggering reveals more of the plumbing.
Exchange wallets are black holes for NFTs: the tracer flows in, never out, settles into the exchange’s infrastructure, and lights up every wallet it touches. Only your exchange pick goes in the metadata; the tracer and the deposit are already in the txid and asset name, so nothing redundant is written and anyone can reproduce the study from the chain alone. Watch it light up the map →
An exchange label is an inference from voluntary deposits, on-chain footprint only, not a confirmed entity. Back to the overview →