How to Compare Two Wallets on Robinhood Chain
Comparing two wallets on Robinhood Chain (chain ID 4663) is a way to move past a single leaderboard score and see how two addresses actually differ in the way they trade. Done well, it surfaces size, consistency, and drawdown behaviour that a rank position glosses over. Done badly, it just amplifies whichever number is easier to sort by.
A useful comparison is always multi-metric and always over the same window. Two wallets can be tied on P/L and completely different on the risk they took, or tied on win rate and completely different on the size behind those wins. The point of the comparison is to see those differences, not to declare a winner.
In this article, see also: how leaderboards compress these metrics into one scorewhy win rate alone is misleadingrun each wallet through the research checklist.
The metrics that matter
Compare volume traded, position count, realized P/L, win rate, average position size, and the shape of the P/L distribution — is one wallet carried by one large winner? Also compare recency: a wallet that stopped trading last month is a different animal from one that traded yesterday.
Normalise the window
Rank both wallets over the exact same lookback and price source on chain 4663. Different windows and different valuation choices are enough to flip a comparison; matching them is the minimum bar for a fair read.
Limitations
A comparison describes past behaviour. It does not prove that either wallet is skilled, that one will continue to outperform the other, or that either address is controlled by a single operator. Treat it as a research aid, not as a ranking.
Frequently asked questions
Which single metric should I sort by? None. Sorting by any one metric hides the others: P/L hides size and drawdown, win rate hides expected value, volume hides skill entirely. Pick a small set and read them together. How long a window should I use? Long enough to include multiple market conditions on chain 4663 but not so long that ancient trades dominate. A 30-to-90-day window is a common starting range; state the window explicitly and use the same one for both wallets. Can I compare a copy trader against their source? Yes, and it is instructive. The comparison usually shows the copy wallet consistently below the source on realized P/L per position — the mechanical cost of latency and price impact in copy trading.
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.
- Robinhoodchain Blockscout explorer— Underlying history for both wallets.
- Robinhood Chain docs — overview— Chain-4663 network reference.
Trade Robinhood Chain like a pro
Screener, live pairs and one-tap execution — all built for chain 4663.