Ready to put your REEF to work? Use Reef Bridge to carry tokens from Ethereum or BNB Chain into Reef Chain in a few clicks. Connect your wallet, pick the source network, enter the amount, and confirm. If it’s your first time, approve REEF once, then submit the transfer and pay the source-chain gas. The bridge moves your balance 1:1—no price impact and no conversion step—so what you send is exactly what arrives on Reef Chain. Track the handoff in the interface and receive REEF on Reef Chain, where it becomes your primary balance for apps and fees. Keep a little ETH or BNB for gas on the origin network and a small amount of REEF for actions on Reef Chain.
To start staking the same day you bridge, open your Reef-compatible wallet and head to the staking page. Choose a validator, review commission and uptime, delegate the amount, and confirm. Rewards accrue per era; you can compound by redelegating or claim to your wallet. Switching validators is straightforward: unbond, wait the short unbonding period, then redelegate. Because transactions on Reef Chain settle quickly and cost very little, you can fine-tune positions without worrying about fees eating your yield.
Creators can fund minting on Sqwid in minutes. After bridging, connect to Sqwid, create a collection, set royalties, upload media and metadata, and mint. You can list at a fixed price, schedule drops, or run auctions, with sales and fees settled in REEF. For teams running frequent releases, keep a topped-up REEF balance on Reef Chain and reuse saved templates to speed up launches. If you work with collaborators, split royalties at mint time so payouts flow automatically on-chain.
Traders and liquidity providers can bridge once and operate on ReefSwap at low cost. Connect your wallet, choose pairs, and swap or add liquidity; pool shares and rewards are tracked on-chain. Moving treasury funds? Bridge in bulk, split to multiple wallets, and execute payouts in a single session. Developers can fund contracts, seed liquidity, or run test transactions without burning through expensive L1 gas. Best practices: send a small test first, verify destination addresses, avoid peak congestion on the origin network, and keep notifications on so you don’t miss completion prompts.
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