The Robinhood Chain Trading Checklist

Nock Terminal Editorial Team

Trading on Robinhood Chain (chain ID 4663) is a compact loop with a lot of ways to skip a step. This checklist collects the pre-trade and post-trade reads that catch the common failures — wrong network, missing approval, unusable slippage, over-sized order, unverified contract — before they turn into a reverted swap or a stuck position.

The list is not exhaustive and it is not a substitute for a risk review of the specific token. Treat it as the minimum floor: if a swap fails any of these steps, stop and diagnose before broadcasting instead of retrying with a wider slippage.

In this article, see also: the full swap flow on chain 4663screener-side pre-trade data checklistfull memecoin risk checklist.

Pre-trade checks

Confirm your wallet is on Robinhood Chain (chain ID 4663), not another EVM network with a similar name. Check that you hold enough ETH for both the approval and the swap. Paste the input and output contract addresses from a trusted source and verify them on Blockscout before selecting them.

  • Network is chain 4663 (not testnet, not another EVM).
  • ETH balance covers approval + swap + a small buffer.
  • Contract addresses verified on robinhoodchain.blockscout.com.
  • Pool depth and 24h volume read from a screener you trust.
  • Slippage tolerance picked against this specific pool.

At-broadcast checks

Read the quoted price impact, the minimum output the router will enforce, and the estimated gas. If any of them is outside what you accepted a moment ago, cancel and re-quote rather than sign.

Post-trade checks

Open the transaction hash on Blockscout, confirm the executed input and output amounts, and record the pool used. If the executed output differs materially from the preview, note the pool and reduce future exposure to it until you understand why.

Limitations

A checklist reduces predictable failure modes; it does not remove market risk, contract risk, or protocol risk. Passing every item does not mean the trade will be profitable — only that the trade was executed with the information you had.

Frequently asked questions

Do I have to run every item on every trade? For a token and pool you have already traded through, the network and contract checks are cached; the pool-depth and slippage checks still need a fresh read because they change block by block. What if a step fails? Stop. A failed check is information — usually about the pool, the contract, or the wallet state — that a wider slippage or a retry will not fix. Diagnose the specific failure before broadcasting. Is passing the checklist a safety guarantee? No. The checklist covers common execution failures, not the market or contract risk of the token itself. Treat it as a floor, not a ceiling.

For a token and pool you have already traded through, the network and contract checks are cached; the pool-depth and slippage checks still need a fresh read because they change block by block.

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.

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