Learn how fake DEX websites imitate real trading interfaces and how to verify official links before connecting a wallet.

Quick judgment: this page is part of the Eonwell DEX knowledge path. It is designed to help readers understand swaps, liquidity, routes, approvals, network differences, and safer trading habits before using decentralized exchanges.

Core idea

Fake DEX sites can copy logos, layouts, token pages, and wallet connection flows.

Some fake pages ask users to sign malicious permissions or approvals.

Search ads, social posts, and fake support links can lead to clone websites.

Bookmarking official links and checking URLs carefully can reduce risk.

Practical checklist

  • Use official links.
  • Avoid random ads.
  • Check domain spelling.
  • Never sign suspicious prompts.

Common mistake

A common mistake is treating a DEX swap as a simple button press. In reality, a swap may include wallet connection, network selection, token approval, routing, slippage tolerance, gas estimation, and final transaction confirmation. Each step should be checked before signing.

How this connects to Eonwell

DEX knowledge connects wallet safety, token verification, liquidity awareness, and presale judgment. Once a reader understands how decentralized exchanges work across Ethereum, BNB Chain, Solana, and Layer 2 networks, they can make cleaner decisions before interacting with new tokens or DeFi apps.