OneBalance
OneBalance
  • Welcome to OneBalance
  • OneBalance Toolkit
    • Introduction
    • Get Started with OneBalance SCA
      • Setup OneBalance Toolkit with Privy
        • Step 1: Setting up Privy
        • Step 2: Setting configurations
        • Step 3: Initializing and Depositing onto the OneBalance Smart Account
        • Step 4: Displaying Chain-Aggregated Balances
        • Step 5: Fetch a quote for transaction execution
        • Step 6: Signing transactions with Privy
        • Step 7: Executing transactions
        • Step 8: Getting execution status
      • Contract calls guide
        • Usage code samples
  • OneBalance vision
    • Our vision
      • Mission of OneBalance
      • Use Cases
      • Credible Accounts and Credible Stack
      • Fellowship of OneBalance
      • Glossary
    • Why resource locks?
      • Technical Details
        • Resource lock
        • Permissions
        • Credible accounts
        • Credible Commitment Machine (CCM)
        • FAQ
          • How does this relate to account abstraction and 4337?
          • Where does the OneBalance account live?
          • Are OneBalance accounts non-custodial?
      • Credible Stack Deep Dive
        • Apps
        • SDK providers
        • Wallets / WaaS
        • Solver Networks
        • Oracle Providers
        • Data Providers
  • Other
    • OneBalance Demo App
      • Roadmap
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
    • OneBalance Brand Assets
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  1. OneBalance vision
  2. Our vision

Use Cases

Building chain-free web3 applications

  1. Aggregate your multi-chain balances into one balance. No need to manage chains to spend your funds. One account to perform all transactions within the blockchain space.

  2. Pay with any token from any chain, and never bridge again. Solvers can accept any token or coin as payment and manage bridging and paying for gas behind the scenes.

  3. Cross-chain gas abstraction. Pay for transactions in any token from your account not thinking of the chains your assets are sitting on.

  4. Request simple, reliable, and near-instant transactions. Since wallets can programmatically issue transactions on any chain, these can be initiated with voice commands and benefit from the execution speed and reliability of sophisticated solvers.

  5. Grant apps permissions you can actually understand. Gone are the days of blind transaction signing. Users can manage and issue scoped permissions over how their assets are used, on which chains, and by whom. Play a game or trade without the need to sign every time with your wallet.

  6. Non-custodial, without compromise. It would be boring if this was all done in a centralized way. OneBalance allows you to do all of this while remaining fully non-custodial. No more compromising.

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Last updated 10 months ago