Check current verified examples
WTF first compares the hash with the verified example patterns available today.
Paste a transaction hash and get a plain-language breakdown of supported actions like approvals, ENS renewals, and token transfers.
WTF uses AI to turn onchain transactions into human-readable explanations, then learns from the examples people ask it to explain next.
WTF first compares the hash with the verified example patterns available today.
If a verified pattern matches, WTF shows a concise answer with evidence you can check in the explorer.
If no verified interpreter matches, WTF shows public lookup facts only and does not invent an explanation.
You can submit app, network, and goal details as intake metadata for future interpreter work.
Ratings and context help decide which reusable explanations are worth building next, outside this app.
A new interpreter only becomes product copy after it has been checked and added to the shipped fixture set.
Today, explanations come from deterministic verified examples and the public evidence attached to them. If no verified example matches, WTF shows a conservative unknown state instead of generating a new answer.
No. Block explorers like Etherscan are for transaction data, deep inspection, debugging, and seeing everything that happened inside a transaction. WTF is a small explanation layer for supported examples. You should still open the transaction in an explorer before acting on anything important.
No. WTF is designed to make transaction evidence easier to understand, but explanations can still be incomplete or wrong. Treat the answer as a useful starting point, not a guarantee. Before you act on anything important, check the actual transaction data in a block explorer.
User ratings and optional context show which missing patterns may be worth building next. That future interpreter work happens outside the public app; the current app records intake, records feedback, and serves verified examples.
WTF can record your context as intake metadata for future interpreter work. It does not guarantee review or response, send email follow-up, or show a speculative explanation.
Yes. Feedback like “Accurate,” “Partly,” or “Wrong / missing something” is recorded and can help prioritize future improvements.
No. WTF explains supported public transaction evidence. It is not wallet recovery, protocol support, trading advice, or a guarantee that funds can be recovered. Always compare important answers with the actual transaction data in a block explorer.