Wallet tracker vs block explorer on Robinhood Chain
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 wallet tracker and a block explorer both show 'what a wallet did', but they do different work. A tracker curates: it computes realized PnL, win rate and trade count, and can push follow alerts. An explorer decodes: it shows every raw transfer and contract interaction, unfiltered, from chain 4663.
This page explains where each surface fits on Robinhood Chain. We cite Nock Terminal (Nock Scout) for the tracker side and Blockscout for the explorer side; both are checkable on their own sites.
In this article, see also: Nock Scout wallet leaderboardwallet address lookupwallet intelligence featurechain-4663 wallet trackers.
What a wallet tracker is for
A tracker turns raw chain history into decisions: sort a leaderboard by realized PnL, filter by win rate, follow specific addresses and get alerts when they trade. Nock Scout does this for chain 4663. Realized PnL is a decision aid computed from indexed swaps, not a prediction — a wallet with strong past performance can still lose on the next trade.
What a block explorer is for
An explorer is the source of truth for every raw transfer and event. On Blockscout you can open a wallet's address page and see every transaction, token balance and internal call. It does not compute PnL for you and does not push follow alerts — you export or read the data manually.
The two tools are complementary. Use the tracker to shortlist wallets worth watching; use the explorer to audit an individual transaction the tracker highlighted.
Evaluation criteria and caveats
Criteria: leaderboard ranking, realized PnL calculation, win-rate calculation, alerting, raw transfer history, contract interaction decoding. Caveat: PnL and win rate depend on how a tool defines realized events; two trackers can produce different numbers for the same address. The explorer's raw view is not opinionated but also is not curated.
| Criterion | Wallet tracker (Nock Scout) | Block explorer (Blockscout) |
|---|---|---|
| Ranked wallet leaderboard | Yes | No |
| Realized PnL / win-rate calculation | Yes | No — raw only |
| Follow alerts | Yes — via NockBot on Telegram | No |
| Raw transfer history | Yes (via linked tx) | Yes — canonical |
| Contract interaction decoding | Yes (curated) | Yes (raw) |
Frequently asked questions
Can a wallet tracker replace an explorer? No. A tracker curates and computes; an explorer is the raw view. When you want to audit an unusual transaction, open Blockscout — it is the canonical view of chain 4663. Are realized-PnL numbers the same across trackers? Not necessarily. Different trackers apply different rules for cost basis and gas treatment, so two tools can compute different realized-PnL values for the same address on the same chain. Do I need to sign a message to see a wallet's history? No. Both Nock Scout and Blockscout let you look up any address on chain 4663 without connecting a wallet — the data is public.
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.
- Nock Scout — wallet leaderboard— first-party wallet-tracker reference
- Robinhood Chain Blockscout explorer— canonical chain-4663 explorer
- Robinhood Chain docs— chain-4663 identity
Trade Robinhood Chain like a pro
Screener, live pairs and one-tap execution — all built for chain 4663.