Every nimimo user gets a link. nimimo.com/@lucky-mountain. That link is a payment page — a public profile that shows your receiving addresses for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana. Anyone can open it. Anyone can send to it. The sender doesn't need a nimimo account. They don't need to download anything. They just pick a chain and send from whatever wallet they already use.
This is the core idea: crypto should be as receivable as a Venmo username. One link in your bio, your email signature, your invoice — and you're set up to receive from every major blockchain.
How one name becomes three addresses
When you create a nimimo identity, a single wallet secret is generated in your browser — the same kind used by hardware wallets like Ledger and Trezor. From that one secret, nimimo automatically derives three addresses: one for Bitcoin, one for Ethereum, one for Solana. All mathematically linked, all created on your device, all cached on the server as public data.
The wallet secret never leaves your device. The addresses are public by design — that's the whole point. They're meant to be shared.
Your profile is a payment page
Your nimimo profile at nimimo.com/@your-name is designed to be found. It shows up in Google search results. It has rich previews when shared on social media or in group chats. It's structured so that AI assistants can read and recommend it when someone asks how to pay you.
This matters because the profile isn't just a page — it's a discoverable endpoint. When someone searches for your handle, it should appear. When someone shares your link in a message, the preview should show your name and what chains you accept. Your identity works for you even when you're not looking at it.
How sending works — for both sides
For people using any existing wallet — MetaMask, Ledger, Coinbase Wallet, Phantom, Trust Wallet — the flow is simple: open the link, see the addresses, copy the one for your chain, paste it, send. No nimimo account needed. No download. No registration. The profile works like a payment invoice that never expires.
For nimimo-to-nimimo sends, it's even simpler. Type @lucky-mountain as the recipient. nimimo figures out the right address for the chain you're sending on. You never see a hex address. You never select a network. You just type a name and confirm the amount.
Sending on all three chains
nimimo handles transaction building and signing for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Solana — all within your browser. Each chain has its own rules for how transactions work, how fees are calculated, and how signatures are created. nimimo handles all of that behind the scenes.
You see a simple screen: who you're sending to, how much, and the estimated fee. Confirm, and it's done. The complexity is real — but it's the app's job to handle it, not yours.
Why this matters for adoption
The crypto wallet market has over 80 million users globally, but mainstream adoption has stalled because receiving crypto still requires being in the ecosystem. You need a wallet to get a wallet address. You need to understand chains to accept payment on the right one. The entire model assumes the receiver is already onboarded.
nimimo inverts this. The receiver signs up with an email and gets a payment link in under 10 seconds. No blockchain knowledge required. No wallet app to download. The sender — who is already in crypto — does the chain-specific work. The receiver just shares a URL.
Open for integration
nimimo handles are designed to work beyond our platform. Any app, payment processor, or service can look up a nimimo handle and get the associated addresses. Your name isn't locked to one app — it works anywhere that chooses to support it, just like email addresses work across every email client.
One link. Three blockchains. Zero setup on the receiving end. That's the entire product in one sentence. Everything else — the encryption, the recovery cards, the wallet, the transaction signing — exists to make that sentence true without compromising on security.