Web3 Antivirus has now analyzed 365,103,396 wallets and flagged 107,646,444 risks, putting the current wallet risk rate at 29.5%. The platform's dashboard surfaces wallet health, token approvals, transaction history, and potential exposures before a user signs.
The number matters less than the workflow it suggests: most wallet drains do not announce themselves in the address itself. They show up in stale infinite approvals, in permissions granted to contracts the user has long forgotten, and in transaction patterns that look ordinary in isolation but sit inside a known drainer cluster. Surfacing those layers before a signature is the actual product.
Why it matters
A near-30% risk rate across a scanned base that large is not a niche finding — it implies that roughly one in three wallets a user might interact with carries some flagged exposure, whether that's an active approval to a known drainer, a history tied to a flagged cluster, or an asset mix associated with rug-pull patterns. The dashboard is essentially a pre-signature due diligence layer for the wallet-to-wallet economy.
Market impact
Tools like this sit in an emerging category between block explorers and security firms — lighter than a full audit, heavier than a raw address lookup. As drainer-as-a-service kits professionalize, the marginal cost of running a quick health check before approving a transaction falls, and the expectation that retail users do so rises. The 107.6M risk count is also a useful upper bound on the addressable incident surface that mainstream wallets and custody providers will increasingly need to address on behalf of their users.
Frequently asked questions
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What is Web3 Antivirus?
Web3 Antivirus is a security dashboard that scans wallet addresses for exposure before a user signs a transaction. It surfaces wallet health, token approvals, transaction history, and potential risks tied to known drainer clusters.
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How many wallets has Web3 Antivirus scanned?
The platform reports 365,103,396 wallets analyzed and 107,646,444 risks detected, with the current wallet risk rate at 29.5%.
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What does a 29.5% wallet risk rate actually mean?
Roughly one in three wallets scanned carries some flagged exposure — an active approval to a known drainer, a transaction history tied to a flagged cluster, or an asset mix associated with rug-pull patterns.
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Why do most dangerous wallets not look suspicious?
The exposure lives in stale infinite token approvals, permissions granted to long-forgotten contracts, and ordinary-looking transactions that sit inside a known drainer cluster. The address itself rarely signals the risk.
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How does this fit into the broader wallet security stack?
It sits between a block explorer and a full audit firm — lighter than a smart-contract review, heavier than a raw address lookup, and oriented toward pre-signature checks for everyday wallet-to-wallet activity.