EVM Explorer
1. Wallet Integration
The Invest Network Explorer supports seamless wallet connections, giving users a personalised and real-time view of their blockchain activity. Integration differs slightly between EVM Mode and Native Mode:
1. EVM Mode
The Explorer integrates with EVM-compatible wallets such as MetaMask, allowing users to interact with the EVM layer directly.
With wallet integration in EVM Mode, you can:
View wallet activity – Instantly see all transactions made by the connected wallet.
Track dApp interactions – Monitor activity across decentralized applications linked to your wallet.
Explore smart contract interactions – View token transfers, contract deployments, and method calls in detail.
This makes on-chain monitoring simple and keeps all EVM-related activity accessible within the Explorer.
2. Native Mode
For the native Invest blockchain, users connect via the Invest Native Wallet (or CLI wallet, if supported).
With native wallet integration, you can:
Check balance and transfers – Monitor native token movements.
Track staking activity – View validator delegations, staking rewards, and withdrawals.
Follow governance actions – See proposals, votes, and participation tied to your wallet.
This ensures that users and validators can fully explore and manage activity on thenative layer_ of the network._
1.1 Key Benefits
The Invest Network Explorer is built to make blockchain data easy to understand and accessible to everyone — whether you're an experienced developer, a validator, or just exploring how the technology works.
Simple transaction tracking: You can quickly look up any wallet or transaction to see what happened, when it happened, and who was involved — helping you stay informed and in control.
Immediate verification for dApp users: If you’re using a decentralised app, you don’t have to wonder if your transaction went through. Invest Network Explorer lets you verify it instantly and see all related contract details.
Transparency that builds trust: By making all on-chain activity visible and verifiable, the Explorer supports a more open and trustworthy blockchain ecosystem for everyone involved.
Insights into validator activity: Users can also view performance stats for validators — which is especially helpful for those staking or participating in governance.
Clarity on smart contract actions: From token transfers to contract deployments, the Explorer helps break down complex interactions so they’re easy to follow and understand.
With Invest Network Explorer, blockchain data becomes more than numbers and hashes — it becomes meaningful, actionable insight.
2. Dashboard
The Invest Network Explorer Dashboard is your go-to place for a clear and real-time view of everything happening on the Invest Network blockchain. It’s designed to feel simple and intuitive.
The dashboard brings all the essential information together in one place, pulling directly from the Invest Network blockchain and updating in real time.
It helps you:
Get a sense of the network’s current health
See how the blockchain is performing — from uptime to transaction throughput — so you always know where things stand.
Access key market indicators
Track token price trends, market cap, and other useful metrics to stay updated on the economic side of the ecosystem.
Invest Network Coin Price
View the current market price of Invest Network Coin (in USD), updated continuously to reflect real-time value.
Invest Network Coin Transfers
Track the number of transactions involving Invest Network Coin over a selected time period. This helps users understand coin usage trends.
Total Accounts
See how many new accounts have been created, offering insight into user growth and adoption on the network.
Transaction Fees
Monitor the total amount of fees paid in Invest Network Coin over time, giving a clear picture of network activity and cost.
Follow block and transaction activity live
Instantly see when new blocks are added and which transactions are included, giving you real-time transparency into network operations.
The Explorer Dashboard is designed to make blockchain data not just available — but understandable, useful, and actionable.
2.1 Top Bar
Token Price (INVST)– Displays the current price of the Invest token along with percentage change.
Gas Fee Indicator– Shows the current network gas price, helping you estimate transaction costs.
Notification Banner – Provides real-time indexing updates or alerts (e.g., “99% Blocks Indexed…”).
Network Selector (EVM)– Switch between supported networks.
Connect Wallet – Securely connect your wallet to interact directly with the explorer.
2.2 Navigation Menu Overview
The navigation menu is your starting point to explore everything within the Invest Network Explorer. Designed to be clean and easy to use, it lets you quickly jump between sections without getting lost — whether you’re checking validator stats or exploring recent transactions.
Here’s a closer look at what each menu option offers:
1. Blockchain
This section provides direct access to core blockchain data.
Transactions – View all recent transactions happening on the network.
Internal Transactions – Track internal calls and executions triggered within smart contracts.
Blocks – Browse the latest mined blocks, including details such as timestamp, miner, and transaction count.
Top Accounts – Discover the most active or highest-balance accounts on the network
Verified Contracts – Review smart contracts that have been verified for transparency.
2. Tokens
Focused on token activity and transfers within the ecosystem.
Tokens – View a list of tokens deployed on the network along with key statistics.
Token Transfers – Monitor token movement between wallets to understand network activity and token popularity.
3. Charts & Stats
A section dedicated to visual insights.
Explore network-level charts and performance statistics like transaction trends, gas usage, and activity distribution.
4. API
For developers and technical users, this section provides API access.
RPC API – Endpoints for interacting directly with the blockchain.
ETH RPC API – Standard Ethereum-compatible RPC endpoints for integration and testing.
5. Other
Additional tools and resources to enhance your experience.
Verify Contract – Upload and verify smart contract source code to improve transparency.
Gas Tracker – Monitor real-time gas fees to optimize transaction costs.
2.2 Connect Wallet
The “Add Invest Network Network” button makes it easy to connect your wallet — like MetaMask — to the Invest Network blockchain (INVST Chain) without needing to manually configure anything.
What Happens When You Click the Button?
Once clicked, your wallet will automatically prompt you to approve the network connection.
After approving, a green checkmark will appear next to the button, confirming that the Invest Network network has been successfully added to your wallet.
What You Can Do After Connecting?
With your wallet connected to the Invest Network network, you can:
Send and receive INVST tokens with ease
Interact with smart contracts, including signing transactions and verifying interactions
Use dApps built on the Invest Network network
Stake INVST tokens and participate in the validator ecosystem
View your balance and token activity in real-time
This connection ensures a seamless and secure way to explore the full capabilities of the Invest Network blockchain.
2.3 Search Bar
The Search Bar is designed to help you quickly find the blockchain data you're looking for — without needing to navigate through multiple pages or menus.
What You Can Search
You can enter a variety of inputs to instantly access on-chain information, including:
Transaction IDs (TxHash)
Wallet addresses
Block numbers
Smart contract addresses
2.4 Key Metrics Overview
These cards provide a high-level view of network activity. These highlight real-time blockchain performance:
Total Blocks – The cumulative number of blocks mined on the network.
Average Block Time – The average time it takes to mine a block (displayed in seconds).
Total Transactions (Txns) – Total count of transactions processed by the network.
Total Addresses – The number of unique wallet addresses created on the network.
Gas Tracker – Displays the current average gas fee (e.g., <$0.01).
2.5 Daily Transactions & Market Stats
This section provides a visual overview of blockchain activity and key market indicators in one place. It helps you quickly understand how active the network is, what the token price looks like and the current market cap..
1. Daily Transactions Graph
The main chart visualizes the number of transactions carried out across the day.
X-Axis (Time) – Shows the time of day (hourly).
Y-Axis (Transactions) – Displays the count of transactions per interval.
Orange Line – Represents overall transaction activity, highlighting trends and spikes.
Hover Highlight– Shows the exact transaction count at a specific time when hovering over the graph.
This feature helps you spotpeak activity hours_ and understand_network usage patterns.
2. Daily Transactions (Quick Stat)
Located to the right of the graph, this shows the total number of transactions in the last 24 hours.
Example: 2.22k means approximately 2,220 transactions occurred in the last day.
3. Invest Token Price (INVST)
Displays the current token price along with its percentage change in real time.
Example: $05.0000 (-2.63%)
If the percentage is red, the price is down; if green, it indicates growth.
This helps investors track token performance instantly.
4. Market Cap
Shows the total market capitalization of the Invest token (calculated as price × circulating supply).
Why it matters:
This section combines on-chain activity data (transactions) with market performance data (price & market cap), giving both developers and investors a quick but powerful snapshot of how the network and its token are performing.
2.6 Latest Blocks and Transactions
The Latest Blocks and Transactions panel gives you a real-time feed of what’s happening on the Invest Network. It is designed for quick tracking of network activity, whether you’re monitoring new blocks being mined or verifying the most recent token transfers.
1. Latest Blocks
This section lists the most recent blocks added to the blockchain. Each block entry includes:
Block Number (e.g., #28297) – A unique identifier for the block.
Time – How long ago the block was mined (e.g., 16s ago).
Txn (Transactions) – The number of transactions included in that block.
Reward – The block reward earned by the validator.
Validator – The address of the validator who mined/validated the block.
At the bottom, a “View all blocks” link allows you to explore the complete list of blocks with detailed data.
Use case: This section is especially useful for developers and validators who want to quickly confirm the status of block production and rewards.
2. Latest Transactions
This section lists the most recent transactions broadcast to the network, with a clear breakdown of their status.
Each transaction entry shows:
Type – Such as Coin Transfer.
Status – Whether the transaction was successful, pending, or failed.
Txn Hash – A clickable hash linking to the full transaction details.
Timestamp – Time elapsed since the transaction was processed (e.g., 2d ago).
From / To Addresses – Sender and receiver wallet addresses, with a convenient copy option.
Value – The transferred amount (e.g., 100,000 INVST).
Fee – The transaction fee (e.g., 0 INVST).
At the bottom, the “View all transactions” link lets you dive into the full transaction history.
Use case: This section is ideal for users who want to confirm their own transfers, track token movements, or audit network activity in real time.
Why It Matters
Latest Blocks keep you informed of block creation, validator activity, and rewards
Latest Transactions provide transparency by letting you see the most recent transfers on the network.
Together, these panels make it easy to monitor network health, verify activity, and ensure transparency on the Invest Explorer.
2.7 Footer
The Footer section of the Invest Network Explorer serves as a helpful resource area, offering quick access to essential tools, information, and links within the Invest Network ecosystem. Whether you're looking to explore more features, stay updated, or learn about products — the footer is designed to guide you with ease.
What You’ll Find:
Quick Links (Need to be added)
About Us Learn more about the organization behind Invest Network. This section includes:
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service These documents outline how user data is handled and the terms under which the platform operates.
Products & Services Explore Invest Network's companion tools and apps designed to enhance your blockchain experience:
Invest Network Validator App – A management tool for validators to monitor performance, uptime, and rewards.
Invest Network Delegator App – Allows users to stake INVST tokens and earn passive income through delegation.
Social Media Links Stay connected and informed through Invest Network’s official social media channels. You’ll find links to platforms like:
Twitter
LinkedIn Follow for updates, announcements, and community engagement.
The footer is your shortcut to deeper involvement in the Invest Network ecosystem — whether you're exploring, staking, building, or staying informed.
3. Transactions
The Transactions page shows you everything happening on the Invest Network in real time. Think of it as the activity feed of the blockchain — every token transfer, every fee, every block update can be tracked here.
3.1 What Each Row Shows for both Pending and Mined
Every transaction has its own row with the following details:
Txn Hash – A unique ID for the transaction. You can click it to open the full details.
Type – The kind of action, like Token Transfer.
Status – Whether it was successful, pending, or failed.
Method – The smart contract method used (if any).
Block – The block number where this transaction was included.
From / To – The wallet address that sent the transaction, and the one that received it. You can easily copy the addresses.
Value (INVST) – The amount of tokens moved in this transaction.
Fee (INVST) – The cost of sending the transaction.
At the bottom, you’ll find pagination controls to move between pages and view more transactions.
Why It’s Useful:
For everyday users: Check if your transfer went through.
For traders: Track movements of tokens across wallets.
For developers: See which contract methods are being executed and how much gas/fees they cost.
3.2 Transaction Details Page
The Transaction Details page gives you the full breakdown of a single transaction on the Invest Network. It’s where you go when you want to see everything about how a transaction was processed, from sender and receiver details to gas fees and block confirmations. !
You’ll see different tabs at the top. Each one gives you a deeper look at what happened behind the scenes:
Details (default): Shows the main info — status, block, sender/receiver addresses, value, and fees.
Token Transfers: Lists any token movements triggered by this transaction. For example, if sending one transaction moved multiple tokens, they’ll all show here.
Internal Txns: Displays internal (or “contract-to-contract”) calls made during the transaction. These aren’t always visible in the main transaction list but are crucial for understanding smart contract activity.
Logs: Shows event logs generated by the transaction. Developers use this to track emitted events from smart contracts.
State: Displays how the blockchain state changed as a result of the transaction. This is useful for advanced users analyzing contract behavior.
Raw Trace: A step-by-step trace of the transaction execution. It’s the most technical view, showing the exact instructions carried out.
3.2.1 Details
1. Basic Transaction Info
Transaction Hash: The unique ID of the transaction.
Status & Method: Whether the transaction succeeded, failed, or is pending, along with the method used (e.g., token transfer).
Block: The block number that included this transaction.
Timestamp: The exact date and time when the transaction was confirmed.
Confirmations: How many blocks have confirmed this transaction, ensuring its finality.
2. Parties Involved
From: The sender’s wallet address.
To: The receiver’s wallet address.
Each address can be copied with one click.
3. Value & Fees
Value: The number of tokens (INVST) transferred in this transaction.
Transaction Fee: The fee paid to process the transaction.
Gas Price & Gas Used: Technical details about how much gas was used and the cost per unit.
4. Input Data
For advanced users, this section shows transaction input details:
Hex Data: Raw input data submitted with the transaction.
Decoded Input: Human-readable version if it involves smart contract calls.
This is especially useful for developers auditing smart contracts.
3.2.2 Token Transfers Tab
The Token Transfers tab shows any token movements that happened because of this transaction. Sometimes a single blockchain transaction can trigger multiple token transfers, and this tab makes them easy to track.
What You’ll See
Token Name & Standard – The name of the token and its type (e.g., ERC-20, ERC-721, etc.).
Token ID – For NFTs (ERC-721 or ERC-1155), the specific token ID is shown.
From / To Addresses – The sender and receiver wallet addresses, with copy shortcuts for easy sharing.
Value – The amount of tokens transferred.
Badge (like “Token Transfer”) – Indicates the type of action performed.
3.2.3 Internal Transactions Tab
The Internal Txns (Internal Transactions) tab shows the “behind-the-scenes” actions triggered inside a blockchain transaction. When a smart contract interacts with another contract, or when multiple actions are bundled into one transaction, the details appear here.
What You’ll See
Type – The kind of internal action, like DelegateCall, StaticCall, or Contract Call.
Status – Whether the call succeeded or failed (green = success).
From / To – The addresses involved in the internal call, often smart contracts.
Value (INVST) – Any tokens or value moved during that internal execution.
Gas Used (INVST) – How much gas was consumed for that specific internal step.
3.2.4 Logs Tab
The Logs tab shows the event logs that were generated when the transaction was executed. These logs are produced by smart contracts and are used to record specific actions (like transfers, approvals, or custom events coded into the contract).
What You’ll See
Address: The contract that created the log.
Method / Event: The specific function or event name (e.g., Transfer(address from, address to, uint256 value)).
From / To: Wallet or contract addresses involved in the event.
Data: Additional data captured by the event (like token IDs or values).
Topics: Encoded information (like indexed parameters) for developers to filter and query logs.
3.2.5 State Tab
The State tab shows how a transaction changed the blockchain’s state. In simple terms, it tracks what values or balances looked like before and after the transaction.
What You’ll See
Type: The kind of state change (e.g., Mint Action).
Token ID: The ID of the token involved (important for NFTs).
Address: The wallet or contract address where the change happened.
Before: The balance or value before the transaction.
After: The updated balance or value after the transaction.
Change: The net difference (positive or negative), often shown in green (+) or red (–).
3.2.6 Raw Trace Tab
The Raw Trace tab gives you the most technical view of a transaction. It shows the raw execution trace — a step-by-step record of how the blockchain processed the transaction.
The data is structured for developers but is still accessible for anyone who wants the “raw truth” of what happened.
4. Internal Transactions
The Internal Transactions page gives you a detailed view of all the “behind-the-scenes” actions happening on the blockchain. Unlike normal transactions (wallet-to-wallet transfers), internal transactions occur inside smart contracts when one contract interacts with another.
These don’t always appear in the main Transactions page, but they’re crucial for understanding how decentralized apps (dApps) and smart contracts actually work.
4.1 What You’ll See
Each row in the table shows an internal transaction with:
Parent Hash – The main transaction that triggered this internal action.
Type – The type of internal call (e.g., Call, DelegateCall, StaticCall).
Status – Whether it succeeded or failed.
Block – The block number where the transaction was included.
From / To – The sender and recipient addresses (often smart contracts).
Value (INVST) – The token amount moved during the call (if any).
Timestamp – When it happened (e.g., 2 days ago).
At the bottom, pagination lets you browse through older internal transactions.
4.2 Difference Between Transactions and Internal Transactions
Transactions: These are the main, user-initiated transfers recorded directly on the blockchain (e.g., when a wallet sends tokens to another wallet). They always have their own transaction hash.
Internal Transactions: These are “sub-actions” triggered inside a transaction, usually by smart contracts. For example, if you interact with a DeFi contract, your one transaction may trigger multiple internal calls (like moving tokens, staking, or minting). Internal transactions don’t exist on their own — they’re tied to a parent transaction.
Note: The Internal Transactions section is similar to the Transactions section. The key difference is that every blockchain action starts as a regular transaction, but that transaction can also create internal transactions when smart contracts perform extra steps behind the scenes.
5. Blocks
The Blocks page shows the building blocks of the blockchain in real time. Each block contains transactions, rewards, and data that keep the network running securely and transparently.
5.1 What You’ll See
Each row in the table represents one block with:
Block: A unique number that identifies the block (clickable for details).
Size (bytes): The size of the block in bytes, showing how much data it holds.
Validator: The validator/miner who successfully created the block.
Txns (Transactions): The number of transactions included in that block.
Reward (INVST): The reward earned by the miner/validator for producing the block.
Fee Reward: Any transaction fees included in the block.
Time: How long ago the block was added (e.g., “3s ago”).
Base Fee (Gwei): The base fee set by the network.
5.2 Block Details Page
The Block Details page gives you a deep look at a single block in the blockchain. It shows who mined it, when it was created, how many transactions it contains, and the rewards earned.
This is like the “profile page” of a block.
5.2.1 What You’ll See
Block Height: The unique number of the block in the chain (its position).
Size: How large the block is in bytes (amount of data it holds).
Timestamp: The exact date and time the block was mined.
Transactions: The number of transactions inside the block (clickable to view them).
Validated By: The validator/miner address that produced the block.
Gas Used: The total amount of gas consumed by the transactions in the block.
Gas Limit: The maximum gas allowed in that block.
Base Fee Per Gas: The base fee set by the network.
Burnt Fees: Amount of fees burned in the block (removed from circulation).
Priority Fee / Tip: Extra fees paid by users to speed up transactions.
Hash: The unique cryptographic ID of the block.
Parent Hash: The block that came just before this one.
Nonce: A unique value proving the block was mined/validated.
5.3 Transactions Tab in blocks
This page shows all transactions inside Block
Txn Hash: The unique ID of the transaction. Click to view full details.
Type & Method:
Type: Action category (e.g., Coin_transfer)
Method: Function executed (e.g., transfer)
From / To: Addresses involved in the transaction:
From: Sender
To: Receiver
Value (INVST): Amount transferred
Fee (INVST): Total fee paid for the transaction. Part of this fee may be burned (shown at block level as Burnt Fees).
5.4 Internal Txns Tab in Blocks
The Internal Txns tab shows actions that happen inside a transaction, usually triggered by smart contracts.
1. Parent txn hash
The main (outer) transaction that generated this internal action.
Clicking it opens full transaction details.
2. Type
Indicates what happened inside the contract and its status.
Example: Create → a contract was deployed or created.
3. From / To
Addresses involved in the internal call:
From: The contract or externally owned account that triggered the internal action
To: The contract or account created/called
4. Value INVST: Amount of native token transferred during the internal action.
6. Top accounts
The Top Accounts page shows the largest holders of the INVST token. This helps users check distribution, decentralization, and whale activity.
6.1 What You’re Seeing
This table lists the largest holders of the INVST token. It shows:
Rank – Position of the account in terms of how many tokens it holds.
Address – The wallet or contract address holding tokens.
Balance (INVST) – The number of INVST tokens held by the address.
Percentage – The share of the total supply that this wallet holds.
Txn count – The number of transactions involving that address.
6.2 Address Details
The Address Details page provides a complete view of a specific blockchain address (wallet or contract). It gives you a clear snapshot of its balance, activity, and transaction history on the network.
Example: Address 0xF30bd…c0A5
6.2.1 Details Tab in Address Detail
Balance: The current balance of the address (in INVST or other tokens).
Transactions: The total number of transactions this address has been involved in.
Gas Used: The total amount of gas this address has spent across all its transactions.
Last Balance Update: The most recent block number where the balance of this address changed.
At the top, you also have:
Address Hash: The unique string representing the address (with copy option).
6.2.2 Transaction Tab in Address Detail
The Transactions tab shows all the blockchain transactions where this address was involved — whether it was the sender, receiver, or interacting with a contract.
What You’ll See
Each row in the list provides:
Txn Hash: Unique ID for the transaction
Type: The kind of action performed (e.g., Token Transfer, Contract Call, Contract Creation).
Method: The smart contract function called (if applicable).
Block: The block number in which the transaction was included.
From / To: Sender and receiver addresses, with copy shortcuts.
Value (INVST): The amount transferred in that transaction.
Fee (INVST): Transaction fee paid to process it.
Status: Success or failure
6.2.3 Tokens Transfers Tab
The Token Transfers tab tracks all token movements for the selected address. In this case, it shows NFT transfers (ERC-721 tokens). While the Transactions tab lists every blockchain action, the Token Transfers tab focuses only on tokens — both fungible (ERC-20) and non-fungible (ERC-721/1155).
What You’ll See
Token: The name and type of the token.
Token ID: Unique identifier for the NFT being transferred.
Txn Hash: The transaction that triggered the token transfer.
From / To: The sender and receiver addresses of the transfer (with quick copy buttons).
Value: This often represents an amount.
6.2.4 Tokens Tab
The Tokens tab under Address Details gives a snapshot of all tokens currently held by the selected address. Instead of showing transfers, it focuses on the current balance of tokens linked to the wallet or contract.
Think of it as the “token portfolio view” for an address.
6.2.4.1 ERC-20 Tokens
The INVST Token is an ERC-20 utility token used within the INVST ecosystem. It allows users to participate in platform activities, earn rewards, and manage balances directly through their blockchain wallet.
Understanding the Token Details Table
Field
Description
Asset
The token name (Example: INVST Token / SimpleToken).
Contract Address
The smart contract controlling the token. Click to open full details.
Price
Market price per token.
Quantity
Total tokens in your wallet.
Value
Quantity × Price
1. Token Overview Section
When you click on any token (e.g., SimpleToken (SIM)), you land on the Token Detail Page.
Here you’ll see:
Token Name & Standard
Contract Address
2. Token Information
A summary box shows key token statistics:
Max Total Supply: The total number of tokens that can ever exist.
Holders: Number of unique wallet addresses that hold this token.
Transfers: Number of token transfer transactions.
Holders: Another quick link to the holders list.
3. Navigation Tabs
Below the summary, three tabs are available:
Token Transfers: Shows all transfer transactions for this token:
Transaction hash
Method
From / To wallet addresses
Timestamp
Holders: Shows all wallet addresses holding the token and their balances:
Wallet address
Percentage of supply held
**3. Contract:**Displays contract-related details such as:
Source code (if verified)
Read/Write functions
ABI
Contract creator
6.2.4.1 NFTs in Tokens Tab
When an address holds NFTs, the Tokens tab displays them separately from fungible tokens (ERC-20). This gives a clear view of all digital collectibles or assets owned by the wallet.
1. What the NFT Section Shows
When you click NFTs, the explorer displays all NFT assets stored in the wallet address.
What You’ll See
NFT Images / Thumbnails: A preview image of each NFT. If the image is not available or still loading, the card will appear blank or with a placeholder.
NFT ID (Token ID): Shown at the bottom of each card as: ID# 1, ID# 2, etc.
One Card = One NFT. Each card represents a single token owned by the wallet.
2. Understanding the NFT Display Layout
Each NFT card shows:
Preview Image: This is fetched from the NFT’s metadata.
If metadata contains an IPFS URL → the image loads
If metadata is missing or unavailable → the card shows blank
Token ID: Displayed at the bottom left.
3. What Users Can Do from This Page
Verify their NFT ownership: Check which NFTs belong to the wallet.
Preview NFT images: Useful for collectors, traders, or project users.
View Token IDs: Required for transferring NFTs or checking their details.
Track multiple NFT collections: Even if the wallet owns NFTs from different contracts, all appear together.
6.2.4.2 NFT Detail Page
This guide explains every section of the NFT Detail Page you see when you click on a specific NFT (Token ID) inside the invest.net blockchain explorer.
Contract Address or Name of Contract
NFT Image
NFT Information Panel
Owner: Shows the current wallet address that owns the NFT.
Creator: Shows the address that originally minted the NFT (often the contract owner).
Token ID: The unique ID of the NFT inside this collection.
Transfers: Shows how many times this NFT has changed hands.This means (Mint transaction, Possibly internal transfers, Maybe more movements between wallets)You can see these in the Transfers tab.
Token Image: The right panel displays the NFT artwork
Transfers & Metadata Tabs: At the bottom, you have two tabs:
A. Transfers Tab: Shows the full transaction history for Token. Each row usually contains:
Txn Hash – clickable to view details
Method – e.g., MintBatch, TransferSingle, TransferBatch
From → To – sender and receiver
Timestamp – when the event happened
Value / Amount – how many tokens were transferred
B. Metadata Tab: Shows the raw JSON metadata for the token like Image and URL.
6.2.5 Internal Txns Tab
The Internal Txns tab shows all the internal (or “hidden”) transactions related to this address. Unlike normal transactions, internal transactions are triggered inside smart contracts — for example, when a contract automatically sends tokens, distributes rewards, or makes delegate calls.
These don’t have their own transaction hash but are tied to a parent transaction.
What You’ll See
Each row displays:
Token / Contract: The smart contract involved in the internal call.
Type: The type of action (e.g., Call, DelegateCall).
Status: Whether the call was successful.
Block: The block number where this happened.
From / To: The contract or wallet addresses involved in the internal transfer.
Value: The amount of tokens or assets moved in the call.
Timestamp: When the action took place (e.g., 2d ago).
6.2.6 Coin Balance History Tab
The Coin Balance History tab shows how an address’s balance has changed over time. It combines a graph and a transaction list to make it easy to track increases and decreases in token holdings.
Think of it as a wallet statement, showing when and why the balance went up or down.
What You’ll See
Balance Graph (Top)
A line chart showing the balance trend of the address over time.
Lets you quickly spot spikes, drops, or steady holding patterns.
Detailed Balance Changes (Table)
Each row provides:
Block: The block number where the change occurred.
Txn Hash: The transaction that caused the balance update.
Timestamp: When the balance change happened.
Balance (INVST): The total balance after the transaction.
Delta: The amount gained or lost in that transaction (green = increase, red = decrease)
7. Verified Contracts
The Verified Contracts page lists all smart contracts on the network that have been publicly verified. Verification means the developer has uploaded the original source code and the explorer has successfully matched it with the on-chain bytecode.
This makes the contract transparent and safe to interact with.
What You See on This Page
Contract Name & AddressEach row shows the contract name (e.g., SimpleNFTManager01) and its blockchain address.
You can copy or click the address to explore full details.
Balance (INVEST)
Shows the balance held by that contract.
Example: 100 INVST.
Txs (Transactions)
Total number of transactions made with this contract.
Example: 13,570 txns.
Language / Compiler Version
The version of Solidity used to compile the contract.
Example: Solidity 0.4.20.
Settings
Shows if optimization was enabled and any special settings used.
Verified On
The date/time when the contract was verified.
Example: 05-Sep.
License
The software license attached to the contract source code (e.g., MIT).
This tells you how the code can be reused.
7.1 Contract Details
The Contract Details page provides a complete overview of a specific smart contract deployed on the blockchain. It shows the contract’s identity, balance, activity, and technical details.
What You See on This Page
Contract Name: This is the human-readable name given to the contract when verified.
Creator: Shows the address of the account that deployed the contract.
Balance: How many tokens the contract currently holds.
Transactions: Total number of transactions executed with this contract.
Gas Used: The total amount of gas consumed by all transactions interacting with this contract.
Last Balance Update: Shows the most recent block when the contract’s balance changed.
Tabs for More Data
Transactions → All interactions with this contract.
Token Transfers → Token/NFT transfers triggered by the contract.
Internal Txns → Low-level calls made inside the contract.
Coin Balance History → Graph of historical balance.
Logs → Events emitted by the contract (e.g., NFT minted, tokens transferred).
7.2 Verified Contract Details
The Verified Contract Details page shows full technical information about a smart contract that has been verified on the blockchain. Verification ensures that the published source code matches the on-chain bytecode, giving users complete transparency and trust.
7.2.1 Code: What You See on This Page
Contract Verification Banner: Shows the contract status.
Contract Information:
Contract Name → e.g., SimpleNFTManagerV3.
EVM Version → The Ethereum Virtual Machine version used (e.g., Paris).
Optimization Enabled → Whether Solidity optimization was turned on (True).
Verified At → Date and time of verification (e.g., Sep 04, 2025).
Compiler Version → Solidity version used (e.g., 1.17.0).
License → Open-source license applied (e.g., MIT).
Optimization Runs → Number of optimization runs used in compilation (e.g., 200).
3. Contract Tabs
Code → Shows the Solidity source code.
ABI → (Application Binary Interface) defines how external apps interact with the contract.
Bytecode → The low-level compiled code deployed on-chain.
Constructor Arguments
Displays the input parameters used when deploying the contract.
Example: Arg(0): _nftContract = 0x0dc0a5fc1c583f17954AE9121f5A547fAC547c0
These arguments initialize the contract with specific values.
5. Constructor Arguments
Displays the input parameters used when deploying the contract.
Example: Arg(0): _nftContract = 0x0dc0a5fc1c583f17954AE9121f5A547fAC547c0
These arguments initialize the contract with specific values.
6. Contract Types:
Source Code (Solidity)
The verified Solidity code is displayed line by line.
Users can: 1. Review the logic and functions. 2. Audit the contract for security and correctness. 3. Reuse the code (depending on the license).
Option: View UML diagram → provides a visual map of the contract’s structure.
This ensures full transparency of how the contract works.
ABI (Application Binary Interface)
The ABI is a JSON-formatted list that defines how to interact with the contract.
It describes:
Functions (read/write methods).
Events (logs emitted).Input/output parameters.Wallets, dApps, and explorers use the ABI to enable Read / Write interactions.
Without the ABI, users cannot easily call contract functions
Bytecode
Low-level machine code that is actually deployed to the blockchain.
Two parts are shown: 1. Contract Creation Code → instructions for deployment. 2. Deployed Bytecode → the actual compiled code stored on-chain.
Only readable by the EVM, not humans.
This is the raw form of the contract. The verified source code + ABI makes it understandable and usable.
7.2.2 Read/Write Contract
The Read/Write Contract section allows users to directly interact with a verified smart contract through the explorer interface. This is possible only when the contract’s source code and ABI are verified.
Read Contract
Lets you view information stored in the contract without sending a transaction.
This does not require gas fees since it’s a read-only query.
Example: Checking token balances, names, or IDs.
Write Contract
Lets you execute functions that change the blockchain state.
Requires connecting a wallet and paying gas fees.
Example: Transferring tokens, minting NFTs, staking, or calling admin functions.
7.3 Contract Transactions
The Transactions tab under Contract Details lists all the blockchain transactions related to the selected smart contract. This gives users visibility into how the contract has been used and what functions have been executed.
What You See on This Page
Txn Hash
A unique identifier for each transaction.
Clicking it opens the full transaction details page.
Type
Describes the nature of the transaction.
Example: Token transfer.
Status
Shows if the transaction was successful.
✅ Success = confirmed.
❌ Failed = ran out of gas or reverted.
Method
The specific function called within the contract.Example: batchDistributeFreeAirdrop.
This tells you what action the contract executed.
Block
The block number where the transaction was included.
Example: 11223344.
Clicking it takes you to the block details page.
From / To
From → the sender address that initiated the transaction.
To → the contract address receiving the call.
Example: From 0x16... → To SimpleNFTManagerV3.
Value (INVST)
The amount of tokens transferred in the transaction.
Example: 0 means no direct token transfer (function call only).
Fee (INVST)
The gas fee paid for this transaction.
Example: 0.63 INVST.
7.4 Token Transfers
The Token Transfers tab shows all movements of tokens (fungible or non-fungible) related to a smart contract. For NFTs (ERC-721), each transfer corresponds to ownership moving from one wallet to another.
What You See on This Page
**Token:**Name of the token involved.
**Token ID:**Unique identifier of the NFT being transferred..
**Txn Hash:**The transaction hash that executed the transfer.
**From / To:**Shows the wallet that sent the token and the wallet or contract that received it.
Value:
For ERC-721 NFTs, this is usually blank (NFTs are unique items, not measured in token amounts).
For ERC-20, it shows the number of tokens transferred.
Timestamp
How long ago the transfer occurred (e.g., 4w ago).
7.5 Token
The Tokens tab shows all ERC-20 or NFT tokens that are held by or associated with a contract address. It provides a quick summary of balances and token worth.
What You See on This Page
Net Worth
The estimated total value of all tokens held by this contract.
Example: $0.04.
INVST Balance
Shows how much of the native token this contract holds.
Example: 0.99988755 INVST (~$0.04)
Tokens Count
Total number of tokens detected in the contract.
Example: 1 Token ($0.00).
Indicates this contract is linked with only one token type.
ERC-20 / NFTs Tabs
ERC-20 → Displays fungible token balances (like INVST or custom tokens).
NFTs → Displays NFTs (ERC-721/1155) held by the contract.
If “There are no tokens of selected type”, meaning the contract doesn’t currently hold any ERC-20s or NFTs beyond INVST.
Why This Tab Matters
For Users → Lets you see what tokens a smart contract actually holds.
For Developers → Useful to check balances of dApps, treasuries, or vault contracts.
For Auditors → Helps confirm token reserves or distributions in smart contracts.
For NFT Holders → Shows if the contract owns (or has minted) specific NFTs.
7.6 Internal Transactions
The Internal Transactions tab shows all calls made inside a transaction that do not appear as direct transactions on-chain. These are “behind-the-scenes” actions executed by smart contracts.
What You See on This Page
Parent Txn Hash: The main transaction that triggered the internal actions.
Type:
The type of internal action.
Example: Call (a function call between contracts).
Can also include value transfers or delegate calls.
Status
Execution result:
Success = executed correctly.
Failed = reverted inside the contract.
Block: The block number in which the internal transaction was executed.
From / To
From → the contract or wallet that triggered the action.
To → the contract or wallet that received it.
Example: From SimpleNFTManagerV3 → To InvestForms.
Value (INVST): Amount of native token (INVST) moved during the internal action.
7.7 Coin Balance History
The Coin Balance History tab provides a timeline graph showing how the balance of an address (wallet or contract) has changed over time. This helps users track deposits, withdrawals, and activity trends.
What You See on This Page
Balance Graph: A line chart visualizing the address balance across different dates.
Timeline
Dates are displayed on the horizontal axis (e.g., 03 Aug, 10 Aug, 17 Aug, 22 Aug, 31 Aug).
Lets you see when major balance changes occurred.
Balance Scale
Vertical axis shows the amount of INVEST held.
Current Note
“There is no coin balance history for this address.”
This might appear if:
The explorer hasn’t indexed full balance history yet,
Or the balance history graph is still updating.
7.8 Logs
The Logs tab displays the events emitted by a smart contract during transactions. These logs are stored on the blockchain and provide detailed information about what happened inside a function call.
What You See on This Page
**Transaction Section:**Each log is tied to a specific transaction hash.
Method (Event Name)
Shows the smart contract event that was triggered.
Example: FreeAirdropClaimed(address indexed user, uint256 tokenId).
This tells you that a user claimed a free airdrop for a specific token.
Decoded Input Data
Shows the event parameters in a human-readable format.
Example:
From (user) → wallet address that claimed the airdrop.
Value (tokenId) → ID of the token claimed.
Indexed → Marks whether a field is searchable by explorers.
Topics
The hashed representation of event signatures and indexed parameters.
Used internally by Ethereum/EVN to filter and search events.
Raw Data
The raw hexadecimal output from the blockchain.
Explorer decodes this into readable event details for users.
8. Tokens Section
The Tokens page provides a full list of tokens deployed on the blockchain. It shows essential details like token contract, price, market cap, and the number of holders, helping users track token projects across the network.
What you’ll see in table:
Field
Description
Serial No.
Index number for the token in the list.
Token
Name of the token/NFT collection and its contract address. Token standard shown.
Price
Current price of the token (or floor price for NFTs).
On-chain Market Cap
Market capitalization based on circulating supply × price.
Holders
Number of unique wallet addresses holding the token.
Key Uses
Users → Discover tokens available on the network.
Investors → Evaluate popularity via price, market cap, and holders.
Auditors → Verify contract addresses and supply.
Developers → Track active token deployments.
8.1 Token Details (Inventory)
At the top, you see the key details of the token:
Token Name & Symbol: the displayed name and ticker symbol.
Contract Address: The unique address where the token smart contract is deployed. You can click the copy icon to copy it.
Max Total Supply: Shows the total number of tokens that can ever exist.
Holders: Number of unique wallet addresses that currently hold this token.
Transfers: Total count of recorded token transfer transactions.
8.1.1. Navigation Tabs
Token Transfers: Displays all ERC-20 transfers related to this token, including mint, burn, and user-to-user transfers.
Holders: Lists all addresses that currently own MT tokens, along with their balances.
Contract: Shows contract verification status (green check = verified). Verified contracts allow users to see the source code.
8.2.2 Token Transfers Table
This table lists all token-related interactions.
Token ID
Always “–” for ERC-20 tokens because they are fungible.
(ERC-721/1155 NFTs would show actual IDs.)
Txn Hash: The hash of the blockchain transaction.
The function called on the token contract:
transfer → user sent tokens to another user
0x60806040 → low-level contract creation or initialization method used during deployment/minting
From / To: Addresses involved:
From: sender or contract deploying the token
To: receiver or contract address
Timestamp: How long ago the activity occurred (e.g., 6d ago).
8.2.2 Holders Tab
The Holders tab lists all wallet addresses that currently own tokens (NFTs) from the collection, along with how many they hold and what percentage of the supply that represents.
What You See
Collection Summary (Top Section)
Max total supply → The maximum number of NFTs that exist in this collection.
Holders → Number of unique wallet addresses owning NFTs.
Transfers → Total number of NFT transfer transactions recorded.
Holder List (Table View)
Address → The wallet address that holds NFTs from the collection.
Quantity → Number of NFTs the wallet owns.
Percentage → What portion of the collection the wallet owns. Example: 7.1%.
8.2.3 Contracts
When the Contract tab is selected for Token, the explorer displays the verified smart contract details. This is where users, developers, or auditors can review the technical blueprint of the token.
Key Information on This Page
Verification Banner
Contract Source Code Verified (Exact Match) → Confirms that the deployed contract on-chain exactly matches the uploaded source code.
Contract Details
Contract Name.
EVM Version
Compiler Version
Optimization Enabled
Verified At
File Path
Constructor Arguments
Inputs given when the contract was deployed.
Includes:
Implementation Address → The contract that contains the actual logic.
Initialization Data → Sets up storage variables.
Contract Source Code (Solidity)
Full Solidity code is displayed, often from OpenZeppelin standards.
Example here: ERC1967Proxy contract code, which delegates calls to the implementation contract.
UML Diagram option available for visualizing contract architecture.
Other Tabs Available
Code → Full human-readable Solidity source.
ABI → JSON format for interacting with the contract (functions, events).
Bytecode → Low-level deployed machine code.
Why This Tab Matters
For Collectors/Users → Confirms the project is real and contract is verified.
For Developers → Gives full access to audit, reuse, or learn from the contract code.
For Auditors → Checks whether the project uses a proxy (upgradeable), which carries governance and trust implications.
For InvestNet user → Ensures transparency — that the collection is built on open-source, verifiable smart contracts.
9. Charts and Stats
The Invest Stats dashboard gives a snapshot of the overall blockchain activity. It helps users, developers, and investors quickly understand how healthy and active the network is.
9.1 Stats
What Each Metric Means
Average Block Time
The average amount of time taken to produce one block on the blockchain.
Completed Txns
Total number of transactions that have been successfully completed.
Number of Verified Contracts Today
The count of smart contracts whose source code was verified by the explorer on the current day.
Total Addresses
The cumulative number of unique addresses (wallets + smart contracts) that have been created on the network.
Total Blocks
Number of blocks produced since the chain launch.
Total Contracts
This shows how many contracts exist.
Total INVST Transfers
Total number of INVST token transfers made on the chain.
Total Accounts
The number of unique accounts (wallet addresses) that exist on the blockchain.
Total Tokens
Number of different tokens (ERC-20, ERC-721, etc.) deployed.
Total Txns
The overall number of all transactions recorded on the blockchain, including native token transfers, token transfers, contract calls, etc.
Transactions (24h)
The number of transactions processed in the last 24 hours.
Total Verified Contracts
The cumulative number of contracts whose source code has been verified and published on the explorer..
Pending Transactions (30m)
The number of transactions still waiting to be included in a block within the last 30 minutes..
Transaction Fees (24h)
The total amount of transaction fees paid by users over the last 24 hours.
Avg. Transaction Fee (24h)
Average cost of a transaction in the past 24 hours.
9.2 Charts
9.2.1 Accounts Metrics
1. Number of Accounts
Total count of all unique accounts (wallets + contracts) created up to that date.
Shows overall growth of the blockchain ecosystem.
2. Active Accounts
Accounts that have sent or received at least one transaction during the selected time period.
Useful for tracking actual network usage (not just total sign-ups).
3. New Accounts
Accounts created during the selected time period (e.g., per day).
Indicates onboarding of new users/projects.
9.2.2 Transaction Metrics
1. Average Transaction Fee
The mean fee paid per transaction during the selected time period.
Helps measure how expensive (or cheap) the network is to use.
2. New Transactions
The number of transactions created during the selected time period.
Shows activity growth over time.
3. Transaction Fees
The total transaction fees paid across all transactions during the selected time period.
Reflects network revenue and cost for users.
4. Number of Transactions
Cumulative number of transactions recorded in the blockchain over time.
Shows total blockchain adoption and usage growth.
5. Transaction Success Rate
The ratio of successful transactions vs failed transactions during the selected time period.
Important for reliability — a high success rate means transactions are going through smoothly.
9.2.3 Blocks Metrics
1. Average Block Rewards
The average rewards given to validators/miners for producing a block over the selected time period.
Reflects incentives for securing the network.
2. Average Block Size
The average amount of data stored in each block.
Larger block size → more transactions per block.
3. New Blocks
The number of new blocks produced over the selected time period.
Shows the chain’s stability and block production rate.
9.2.4 Tokens Metrics
1. Number of INVST Transfers
The count of transfers of the network’s native token (INVST) in the selected time period.
Reflects token usage and transaction activity.
9.2.5 Gas Metrics
1. Average Gas Limit
The average maximum gas limit set per block.
Defines how much computational work can fit in one block.
2. Average Gas Price
The average price (in Gwei or native token fraction) that users paid per unit of gas in the selected time period.
Higher gas price = more competition for block space.
3. Total Gas Usage
The cumulative amount of gas consumed by all transactions during the selected period.
Indicates demand on network resources.
4. Network Utilization
The percentage of gas actually used compared to the maximum available gas limit.
High utilization = busier network, possible congestion.
5. Average Gas Used
The average gas consumed per block.
Reflects efficiency and how full each block is.
9.2.6 Contracts
1. New Verified Contracts
The number of newly verified contracts in the selected time period.
Verification means developers upload and confirm the source code of the smart contract so anyone can review it.
This builds trust and transparency in the ecosystem.
Example: If 5 contracts are verified today, this chart will show that number for the date.
2. Number of Verified Contracts
The cumulative total of all verified contracts over time.
This shows how the ecosystem of open, auditable contracts is growing.
Unlike the “new verified contracts” chart, this one keeps adding up (never decreases).
10. Others Section
10.1 Verify & Publish Contract
The Verify & Publish Contract page allows developers to confirm that the source code of a deployed contract matches the bytecode stored on the blockchain. Once verified, the contract becomes transparent — anyone can read, audit, and interact with it safely.
What you’ll see on Main sections
Contract Address to Verify
Enter the address of the deployed smart contract.
Example: 0x0000...ced37f.
Verification Methods
Blockscout supports multiple methods (e.g., Solidity Single File, Solidity Multi-Part, Vyper, etc.).
Select any one method
Compiler Version
Choose the exact compiler version used to deploy the contract (e.g., v0.8.28+commit.7893614a).
Must match the one used at deployment, otherwise verification fails.
Optimization Settings
If optimization was enabled during deployment, select it here.
Example: Optimization enabled = 200 runs.
Contract License
Choose a license type for your code (e.g., MIT, Unlicense, GPL).
This defines how others may reuse your source code.
Source Code Upload
Upload the full Solidity source file(s) (.sol) used during deployment.
Can also include contract libraries if used.
Verify & Publish Button
Once all fields are completed, click Verify & Publish.
If successful → contract is marked as “Verified,” and its code, ABI, and read/write functions become publicly viewable.
11. Gas Price Tracker
The Gas Price Tracker helps you monitor how much it costs to run operations on the Invest Network blockchain. Whether you’re sending tokens, minting NFTs, or deploying smart contracts, this page gives you clarity and confidence about transaction fees.
11.1 Transaction Speed Options
When you send a transaction on the blockchain, you must pay a gas fee. This fee has two parts:
Base Fee → The minimum cost required by the network to include your transaction in a block.
Priority Fee (Tip) → An extra reward you give to validators so they prioritize your transaction faster.
Depending on how much you are willing to pay, your transaction can be processed at different speeds:
What does Speed mean here:
Fast:
Your transaction is placed at the front of the line.
You pay both the base fee + a higher priority fee.
Best for urgent transactions (e.g., trading, time-sensitive transfers).
Normal
Your transaction is processed at a standard pace.
You pay the base fee + a small priority fee.
Balanced choice — not urgent, but not too slow.
Suitable for everyday transfers and contract calls.
Slow
Your transaction is included only when blocks are less full.
You pay only the base fee or a very small tip.
Cheapest option, but confirmation takes longer.
Best for non-urgent actions (like sending to your own wallet).
What the Chart Displays
Y-Axis (Vertical): Gas price levels (in INVST) — for example, 0.5 INVST, 1 INVST, 2 INVST, etc.
X-Axis (Horizontal): Time intervals — for example, from every other day, updated live.
Orange Line: Represents how gas prices have changed or remained stable across the selected time range.
12. Faucet Page
The Faucet page allows users to request free test INVST tokens for use on the test network. This feature is especially useful for developers and new users who want to experiment with transactions, smart contracts, or staking without spending real INVST tokens.
12.1 What You’ll See on the Faucet Page
Wallet Address Field
Enter your wallet address here to receive the test tokens.
You can paste your address using the Paste button.
Amount
The faucet distributes a fixed number of test INVST tokens per request.
Example: You can request up to 500 coins.
Request Button
Click Request Funds to send the tokens to your wallet.
The faucet processes the request and the tokens are delivered within minutes.
12.2 Rules & Limitations
Requests are rate-limited (e.g., 1 request every 24 hours per wallet).
Tokens from the faucet are test tokens only — they have no real-world value.
These tokens can be used for testing transactions, deploying contracts, or exploring validator/staking features on testnet.
12.3. How to Use the Faucet
Open the Faucet Page.
Copy your wallet address from your Native wallet.
Paste the address into the Wallet Address field.
Click Request Funds.
Wait a few moments, then check your wallet — the test INVST tokens will appear.
Last updated