How we review crypto exchanges, wallets, and tools.
Every review on CryptoLurk follows the same process, whether the platform has an affiliate relationship with us or not. This page explains exactly what CrisCoin checks before any exchange, wallet, or tool gets recommended β so you don't have to take "trust me" for an answer.
No platform is reviewed from a press kit or a marketing page. Every review starts with an account, a small real deposit, and a real attempt to use the product the way an actual reader would β buying, withdrawing, staking, recovering a wallet, contacting support with a real question.
How We Evaluate Exchanges
Track record & protections
History of breaches or exploits, whether user funds are held in cold storage, proof-of-reserves availability, 2FA options, and how the platform responded historically β not just whether an incident happened, but what changed afterward.
What it actually costs
Trading fees, withdrawal fees, deposit fees β including hidden ones on card or bank transfers β compared at the volume a typical retail user actually trades, not just the headline maker/taker rate.
Licensing & legitimacy
Which jurisdictions the exchange is licensed in, whether it's registered with relevant financial authorities, and whether it can legally serve the regions its marketing targets.
Real customer support
Actual response times from tickets we've filed ourselves, whether support is human, how fast a real issue gets resolved, and whether the help docs match the current version of the product.
Usability & asset selection
How straightforward the platform is for someone doing this for the first time, and whether the coins and tokens it lists actually match what it claims to support.
How We Evaluate Wallets
Architecture
Whether it's hardware or software, custodial or non-custodial, how private keys are generated and stored, and whether the code has been independently audited or is open-source.
Backup & recovery
How recovery phrases are generated and stored, what happens if the device is lost or damaged, and how forgiving the recovery process is for a non-technical user.
Supported assets & chains
Which blockchains and tokens are actually supported, versus which are "supported" only through a third-party bridge or integration.
Ease of use
Whether setup, sending, receiving, and connecting to dApps works the way the documentation says it does β tested directly, not assumed.
Price & value
For hardware wallets, whether the price matches the security and features on offer compared to alternatives at a similar price point.
What We Don't Do
We don't assign a single numeric "score out of 10" and call it objective β a wallet that's excellent for a beginner storing a small amount long-term isn't automatically the right pick for someone running a validator node. Instead, every review states plainly who the platform is a good fit for, and who it isn't.
We also don't treat "has an affiliate program" and "is good" as the same thing. Plenty of platforms mentioned on this site, in comparisons or guides, have no commercial relationship with CryptoLurk at all.
Keeping Reviews Current
Crypto platforms change constantly β fees shift, security incidents happen, regulations catch up. Reviews on CryptoLurk get revisited whenever something material changes about a platform, not just on a fixed yearly schedule.
Spot something out of date?
If you spot something on this site that's out of date, tell us via Contact Us β we'll check it.
Help us keep every review accurate.
Every message is read personally, and flagging outdated information helps make CryptoLurk more reliable for everyone.
Contact Us β



