Block explorers for Robinhood Chain, compared

Methodology: products are compared from public feature documentation and hands-on use; capabilities can change, so verify claims on each vendor's own site before deciding.

A block explorer is the canonical source of truth for what a transaction and a contract on Robinhood Chain (chain 4663) actually contain. This round-up covers the explorers you can point at chain 4663 today and how they complement a chain-native terminal like Nock Terminal.

Editorial disclosure: Nock Terminal is the publisher. We treat the canonical Blockscout deployment as the primary explorer for chain 4663 because that is what the Robinhood Chain docs link to. Cells that are not documented on the cited page read 'not verified'.

In this article, see also: how to use BlockscoutNock vs Blockscoutscreener vs explorerNock Terminal.

How we selected these explorers

Selection criteria: (1) the tool is reachable at a chain-4663 URL and decodes chain-4663 transactions; (2) the vendor's own site documents chain support; (3) source-code verification is available. Non-explorer surfaces — screeners, terminals and wallet trackers — are covered on separate pages and are only mentioned here for context.

1. Robinhood Chain Blockscout — canonical explorer

The canonical explorer for chain 4663 is hosted at robinhoodchain.blockscout.com. Blockscout is an open-source explorer used by many chains; the Robinhood Chain deployment renders address pages, transaction decoding, verified source viewing and contract read/write panels. Treat this as the authoritative reference view for what any transaction on chain 4663 actually did.

2. Blockscout project site (upstream software)

Blockscout as software is documented at blockscout.com. Reading the upstream project page is useful when you want to understand what the software supports in general, versus the chain-4663 deployment specifically. Feature availability at the deployment level is what matters for a specific chain — use the canonical URL for chain 4663.

3. Nock Terminal (complementary, not an explorer)

Nock Terminal is not a block explorer — it is a trading terminal that indexes chain 4663. It is listed here because its per-token pages and Nock Scout wallet leaderboard consume the same on-chain data an explorer surfaces, and its token pages link out to Blockscout for verified source. Use both together on any serious research pass.

What to check before you rely on any explorer

Two checks are worth running on any explorer view: (1) does the deployment show a 'Verified' badge on the contract source and let you compare source hash to deployed bytecode; (2) can you read event logs on a transaction to see exactly what happened, not just the top-level 'from → to → value'. A canonical explorer does both; a light-weight explorer often does only the first.

ToolRoleChain-4663 URLVerified source viewerTrades directlySource
Robinhood Chain BlockscoutCanonical block explorerrobinhoodchain.blockscout.comYesNorobinhoodchain.blockscout.com
Blockscout project (upstream)Upstream explorer softwareN/A — deploy dependentYes (in canonical deployment)Noblockscout.com
Nock TerminalChain-4663 trading terminal (complementary)nockterminal.comLinks out to BlockscoutYes — NockBot + TradeBoxnockterminal.com

Frequently asked questions

Is Blockscout the official Robinhood Chain explorer? It is the canonical explorer for chain 4663, deployed at robinhoodchain.blockscout.com and linked from the Robinhood Chain documentation. Treat it as the reference view for what any transaction on chain 4663 actually did. Does Nock Terminal replace the block explorer? No. Nock Terminal is a trading terminal, not an explorer. It curates and charts chain-4663 data, but for verified source and raw event logs it links out to Blockscout, which remains the canonical view. Is source verification the same as safety? No. A 'Verified' badge on Blockscout only means the contract's source matches the deployed bytecode; it does not vouch for the contract's behaviour. Read the source or trust an audit before treating a token as safe. Is this a neutral ranking? No. Nock Terminal is the publisher. This is an editorial comparison. Where a vendor's official page does not state a fact, we mark it 'not verified' instead of guessing.

It is the canonical explorer for chain 4663, deployed at robinhoodchain.blockscout.com and linked from the Robinhood Chain documentation. Treat it as the reference view for what any transaction on chain 4663 actually did.

Related

Sources checked

First-party pages used to write or verify the entries above. Vendor pages change frequently — treat each source as the authoritative reference for its own product, not this article.

Trade Robinhood Chain like a pro

Screener, live pairs and one-tap execution — all built for chain 4663.