@daniel_tanaka_x@RysTiK_Ier Which part of OneKey mobile feels limited to you? Bluetooth has been improved a lot, so it's basically the same as desktop now.
As to ledger, I totally agree with you. It’s the biggest hardware wallet company so it has a lot of funds to test and develop. It’s almost a must to get one.
Maybe I should try SafePal as well if it’s mobile friendly. I like OneKey for its convenience on my laptop, but mobile functions are kinda limited and it sometimes forces me to head to my pc.
Thank you for your honest opinion. I’ll consider and you helped me a lot!
@Max_Researchium Consider companion software wallet support in the scoring since daily UX depends heavily on the software layer. OneKey’s software wallet supports ADA very well.
WHERE TO STORE $ADA AND OTHER? RANKING OF COLD #WALLETS.
Ledger | Trezor | SafePal | ELLIPAL | BitBox | Keystone | OneKey.
As soon as you bought Cardano or other cryptocurrencies, the following question appears on the radar: "what is the best way to store them?".
"Not your keys- not your crypto"
Remember this, my friend! This is the most important thing in the storage formula. There will only be COLD wallets in the post, in the future I will also analyze hot wallets for Cardano although it is less secure. I will also talk about the multisig storage method - this is the best way. But today it's only Cold wallets, we're getting started.
Calculation Methodology
The methodology involves a comprehensive evaluation of hardware wallets across 6 categories totaling 100%. Each category has a weight (%), with sub-parameters (%) summing to 100% overall. Scores are assigned as "score / max" (e.g., 9.5 / 10), where max matches the sub-parameter's weight. Scores are based on objective data: device specs, reviews, audits, user feedback, and competitor comparisons (from sources like official sites, Reddit, X, YouTube, Ledger com, Trezor io). High scores reward superiority (e.g., full air-gapped isolation boosts "Resistance to hacking attacks"); low scores penalize weaknesses (e.g., closed code lowers "Open-source code"). Total score is the sum of all parameter scores (out of 100 max). Comparison covers 7 wallets: Ledger Nano Gen5, Trezor Safe 7, SafePal X1, ELLIPAL Titan 2.0, BitBox02 Multi, Keystone 3 Pro, OneKey Pro. This analysis is the author's personal research. I don't pretend to be 100% true. DYOR
Conclusions
Based on scores, the best wallet is Trezor Safe 7 (95.6/100) due to full open-source code, strong security, and reputation. Followed by OneKey Pro (93.4) and Keystone 3 Pro (90.8), excelling in air-gapped design. Ledger Nano Gen5 (80.9) and ELLIPAL Titan 2.0 (82.3) lag due to partially closed code and vulnerabilities. SafePal X1 (85.0) is a budget option; BitBox02 Multi (84.0) suits open-source fans. Choose @Trezor if your long-term reputation and a combination of many advantages (including Cardano support) are important to you. If you need maximum security - @KeystoneWallet.
Save it to your bookmarks. Thanks.
A simpler usage path.
OneKey Pro introduces BTC-only firmware,
focused on Bitcoin storage and usage.
Polkadot upgrades are supported, and USB and Bluetooth controls are now independent.