RouteNova is a learning interface for cross-chain routing. Preview illustrative quotes, see what fees, hops and risk profiles look like, and learn the shape of a multi-venue route — all without connecting a wallet.
RouteNova walks you through the shape of a real cross-chain action, slowly enough to learn it. No wallet. No urgency. No promises.
Choose a source chain and the token you'd be moving. Coverage varies — that's part of what you're learning.
Choose the destination chain and target token. Same chain = swap. Different chain = bridge.
Type a number you'd realistically move. Quotes scale with size — slippage, impact and fees aren't linear.
See hops, network fees, bridge fees, expected time, price impact, minimum received and a risk classification.
Each route surfaces the specific risks for the pair you picked. Bridges aren't all alike.
If you'd actually make the trade, do it on the underlying protocol you choose, with your own wallet, after your own research.
"Just bridge it" is a sentence that hides a lot. Here's how the chains in our demo data differ on confirmation, fees, ecosystem, and the risks specific to each.
The cheapest hop isn't always the safest. The fastest bridge isn't always the most liquid. Comparison surfaces the trade-offs that one-click UIs hide.
Multi-hop paths are the rule, not the exception. Knowing every venue a token passes through is how you spot weak links — bridge counterparties, thin pools, custom contracts.
Network fee, bridge fee, price impact, slippage tolerance, and time-to-finality all eat into outcome. Looking at one number is how you get surprised by the other four.
"Risky" isn't a vibe. It's a profile: which contract holds custody, which validators sign off, which token is canonical, which oracle feeds the price. Routes make these legible.
This is not legal or financial advice. It's a starting list of categories you should be able to recognize before any real route. Read the full Risks page for the longer treatment.
Audits reduce risk; they don't remove it. Every contract a route touches is a possible failure point.
Bridges introduce a separate trust layer beneath the chains they connect. Their failure modes are their own.
Larger trades on thinner pools shift price against you. The number you see at the top isn't always the number you receive.
Public mempools let bots reorder around your trade. Some chains and routers mitigate this; others don't.
Same ticker, wrong contract address. A real route depends on resolving the canonical token on each chain.
Chains have outages. Bridges pause. A route's expected time isn't a guarantee — it's a hopeful estimate.
If something is missing, write to us — there's a contact form and we reply.