Bitok Arena requires one thing from every participant: a Bitcoin address they actually control. Exodus Wallet delivers exactly that — a non-custodial wallet generating your private key locally, available on both desktop and mobile, that gives every holder of multi-asset portfolios a native Bitcoin address suitable for competition entries and prize collection.
Multi-asset portfolios do not require multi-custodian risk. Exodus holds your keys locally for every asset it supports. The Bitcoin address it generates belongs to you — and that is the address that competes.
Exodus is one of the most widely used self-custodial wallets globally, known for its clean interface and accessibility. Understanding how it handles the Bitcoin portion of a multi-asset portfolio is relevant for anyone using it to compete on a daily leaderboard.
What Exodus Is and How It Handles Bitcoin
Exodus is a desktop (Windows, macOS, Linux) and mobile (iOS, Android) wallet that supports over 50 cryptocurrencies from a single interface. The key property for competition purposes: it is non-custodial. When you first open Exodus, it generates a 12-word recovery phrase on your device and never transmits the private keys to any server. Your Bitcoin address is derived from that seed and belongs entirely to you.
Exodus uses a hierarchical deterministic wallet structure, meaning one seed phrase generates all your addresses across all supported assets. The Bitcoin wallet within Exodus generates Native SegWit (bc1) addresses by default on recent versions, which carry the lowest transaction fees on the Bitcoin network. These are the addresses that appear on the leaderboard when you compete.
For competition entries, Exodus behaves like any other self-custodial Bitcoin wallet: navigate to the Bitcoin section, tap Send, paste the master wallet address from the platform, enter the amount, and confirm. The transaction broadcasts to the Bitcoin network from your bc1 address. Your position appears on the leaderboard once the transaction confirms.
Using Exodus for Competition Entries and Prize Receipt
Open Exodus on desktop or mobile and select Bitcoin from your portfolio. Tap or click Send. Enter the master wallet address shown on the platform as the destination — Exodus will validate that it is a valid Bitcoin address before allowing you to proceed. Set the amount and select a fee level: Exodus offers Slow, Medium, and Fast options, each showing the estimated confirmation time and fee cost. For competition entries, the Medium or Fast setting ensures confirmation within the round window.
To add to your position during a round, repeat the process with additional sends from the same Exodus Bitcoin address. Exodus generates a consistent receiving address for your Bitcoin wallet, so all sends from the Bitcoin section go from the same on-chain identity — building one cumulative leaderboard position rather than fragmented entries.
An Exodus Bitcoin address is your on-chain identity for as long as you use that wallet. The competition sees one consistent address building one cumulative position across every send in the round. That consistency is the foundation of a real competitive position.
When a prize is paid to a top-three Exodus address, it arrives as a standard Bitcoin receive — visible immediately in the Exodus wallet interface, spendable as soon as the transaction confirms on-chain. No withdrawal from any platform. No review process. Just Bitcoin, confirmed on the network, now showing in your multi-asset Exodus balance.