Recently, I started taking Web3 investment and trading seriously. Beyond testing trading strategies, managing asset security became a top priority, so I spent considerable time researching hardware wallets.
On one hand, our family tends to be cautious—we don't have funds to waste on security incidents. On the other hand, looking back, fear stemming from the unknown about security was one of the main barriers that kept us from participating earlier. So I wanted to tackle these concerns head-on through proper research.
After comparing various options, I settled on the OneKey Pro + OneKey Lite solution.
The hardware wallet market isn't crowded with options. First, only Ledger and OneKey passed the aesthetics test for me. OneKey is a brand created by a team from China, and everything from their website to product design hits the sweet spot—compact and refined.
What really caught my attention was OneKey's support for Fido2. This means beyond serving as a hardware wallet, the device doubles as an authenticator for other platforms and software—a nice bonus feature.
Ledger certainly has superior design prowess, but I didn't choose it for two main reasons:
Ledger's pricing is somewhat steep
Ledger isn't open-source and offers cloud backup recovery services, which seems to conflict with the principle that seed phrases should never touch the internet. That black box made me uncomfortable
If you're serious about crypto security and looking for a transparent, well-designed solution, 👉 check out OneKey's hardware wallet options that prioritize both security and usability.
Although I purchased through their Shopify store, OneKey has a domestic warehouse in Taizhou, China. Shipping was incredibly fast—arrived in Shanghai the next day.
Everything from packaging to printed materials to the product itself exceeded expectations. The build quality is excellent, and within minutes of powering on, I had created a new wallet and paired it with my phone.
OneKey Pro supports creating hidden wallets using a Passphrase. This approach offers two key benefits:
First, it achieves the effect of managing multiple wallet assets separately without the hassle of managing multiple sets of seed phrases.
Second, Passphrase provides an extra security layer. Even if your main seed phrase is leaked or cracked, without the Passphrase password, no one can access the hidden wallet. This means the main wallet directly corresponding to the seed phrase can serve as a decoy "firewall"—keep a small amount there while storing most funds in the Passphrase-protected hidden wallet.
Throughout the setup process, I had some questions which I posted on X. The team responded quickly, which is another aspect I really appreciate about OneKey: they're incredibly open, responsive, and willing to engage.
For seed phrase backup, besides a handwritten copy, I used two OneKey Lite NFC encrypted cards. Why two? I wanted geographically separate storage, and OneKey's official reseller had a buy-one-get-one-free promotion on their store—couldn't pass that up.
The entire backup process was smooth and straightforward. After verifying the seed phrase once and setting a password, backup is complete. OneKey Lite uses NFC technology, so there's no rust concern, it's waterproof, and without the password, the card can't be read. If the password is entered incorrectly more than 10 times, it automatically wipes the storage. Security seems solid enough. The only vulnerability is fire, which I'm mitigating through geographically separate storage. The overall approach follows the logic of the 3-2-1 backup principle for data storage.
For anyone building a comprehensive crypto security setup, 👉 OneKey's combination of hardware wallet and backup cards offers a practical multi-layer protection strategy.
With this setup complete, I've taken my first real step into crypto. As someone who believes in having the right tools, there's just one final question left after getting all this gear: I've got the wallet, but where's the money?