Foundations
Foundations covers the concepts that stop users from treating crypto like a traditional app. It explains chain state, wallets, custody, signatures, gas, and why every onchain action has irreversible properties.
Start with these signals
Use these as first-pass anchors. If these signals become easier to spot on live screens, the topic is doing real work.
Start with the practical lessons
Work through the main concept first, then move into applied judgment and next actions.
The three beginner mistakes everything else grows from
Most early crypto mistakes come from carrying Web2 assumptions into an environment where permissions are sharper, support is weaker, and bad clicks are much harder to unwind.
How to look at product UI without fooling yourself
The goal of beginner literacy is not memorizing terms. It is being able to look at a swap, token page, or wallet prompt and understand what is operationally happening.
Why balances and polished dashboards can still lie to beginners
One of the first expensive beginner mistakes is assuming that a visible balance, a familiar interface, or a platform dashboard means the assets are safe and fully under the user's control.
What actually happened
These are public cases and repeated real-world patterns turned into teachable stories. Use them to see how small shortcuts become expensive outcomes in real product flows.
Users saw balances every day until the platform owed them $8.7B
When FTX collapsed, the bankruptcy team said the exchange owed customers about $8.7 billion. The lesson for beginners is brutal but simple: visible balances and a smooth product experience never proved those assets were truly under user control.
One real-world failure usually teaches faster than ten abstract warnings.
If the dashboard shows my assets clearly and the product works every day, control is basically the same as ownership.
A product experience where balances, history, and normal activity are easy to see, but the custody and withdrawal reality stays mentally off-screen.
These are the exact product moments where this kind of mistake usually first looks harmless.
Foundations are not abstract. They are what stop a clean balance view from being mistaken for real control.
Teach yourself to ask who really controls the assets, who can halt access, and what layer you are trusting before you let a polished dashboard calm you down.
How this topic breaks down
Mental models to lock in early
Foundations is less about memorizing definitions and more about building habits that stop users from making Web2 assumptions in an irreversible environment.
What users should recognize in product UI
This topic should make core wallet and network interfaces immediately more legible inside ZeroLyx and similar products.
Before you sign or confirm
This section should help in the moment of risk. Keep one question in mind: what should I check right now before giving authority or sending the route forward?
Beginner execution check
Keep building the topic
Once the core lesson is clear, use these paths to widen the mental model or go deeper where the concept matters most.
Go deeper from here
Once the core lesson is clear, use these paths to widen the mental model or go deeper where the concept matters most.