👏Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

SlerfTools supports all EVM chains, and the underlying logic is identical. Whether you are using Base, ETH, X Layer, Plasma, or Monad, the steps are exactly the same. Please simply ensure your wallet (e.g., OKX, MetaMask, or other Web3 wallets) is switched to the target network.

🪙 Token Management


Q1: What is the BSC Token Creation Tool?

A1: The BSC Token Creation Toolarrow-up-right helps users quickly generate BEP20 tokens on the Binance Smart Chain (BSC). No programming is required; just fill in basic information to deploy.

Q2: How long does it take to use the BSC Token Creation Tool?

A2: The token creation process usually takes only a few minutes. Once completed, the token goes live immediately and can be viewed on BscScanarrow-up-right .

Q3: Can I create multiple tokens?

A3: Yes, you can create multiple tokens; each token has its own contract and configuration. However, each creation requires separate payment of gas fees.

Q4: How can I ensure my token contract has no vulnerabilities?

A4: Tokens created with SlerfToolsarrow-up-right are open-source and adhere to standard specifications. For greater security, you can also choose third-party audits or promptly revoke unnecessary permissions.

Q5: Can a token be modified after creation?

A5: A token'stotal supplyanddecimalscannot be modified once set and published. If you need to change these parameters, you must create a new token contract.

Q6: On which platforms can I trade my BSC token?

A6: Your token can be traded on decentralized exchanges like PancakeSwap. As the project grows, you can also apply to list on centralized exchanges.

💼 Wallet Management


Q1: Which wallets are supported?

A1: We support common Web3 wallets such as MetaMask, OKX Wallet, Bitget Wallet, etc.

Q2: Can wallet addresses be generated in bulk?

A2: Yes, the SlerfToools tool supports one-click bulk generation of wallet addressesarrow-up-right, facilitating batch management and distribution.

Q3: Can wallet assets be migrated?

A3: Yes, you can migrate assets in bulkarrow-up-right from one wallet to another, suitable for consolidating funds or changing addresses.

Q4: Can wallet funds be liquidated and sold off?

A4: You can use the liquidation sell functionarrow-up-right to convert the tokens in a wallet into BNB or stablecoins all at once.

Q5: How to recover a lost wallet?

A5: You need to restore the wallet using the mnemonic phrase or private key. Please keep them safe and ensure the private key is not disclosed.

Q6: Is it safe to use the wallet?

A6: The tool only operates the wallet with your authorization; security mainly depends on how you store the mnemonic phrase and private key.

💸 Multisender


Q1: What is one-to-many transfer?

A1: One-to-many transferarrow-up-right refers to sending tokens from one wallet address to multiple addresses simultaneously, commonly used for airdrops or community rewards. To save gas costs, a single transaction supports sending to up to 500 addresses at once.

Q2: What is many-to-one transfer?

A2: Many-to-one transferarrow-up-right can consolidate assets from multiple wallets into a single address, suitable for fund aggregation and unified management.

Q3: What is many-to-many transfer?

A3: Many-to-many transferarrow-up-right allows batch distribution between multiple source addresses and multiple target addresses, suitable for complex fund settlement or team reward scenarios.

Q4: How much gas can bulk transfers save?

A4: Merging multiple individual transactions into one bulk transaction usually significantly reduces gas costs because fixed overhead is shared.

Q5: Do bulk transfers require additional fees?

A5: Besides normal on-chain gas fees, we charge the lowest service fee across the network, only 0.0001 BNB per address.

Q6: What are common reasons for bulk transfer failures?

A6: Common reasons include: insufficient gas fees, incorrectly formatted uploaded CSV files, some invalid addresses or insufficient balances, and network congestion causing slow or failed confirmations. Please check and try again.

🧊 Liquidity Management


Q1: What is creating liquidity?

A1: Creating liquidityarrow-up-right is injecting tokens with BNB or stablecoins into a DEX liquidity pool to form a trading pair, making it easy for others to freely buy and sell.

Q2: How to claim V3 liquidity fees?

A2: In a V3 pool, trading fees within your price range accumulate proportionally to your LP position (in NFT form). They are not auto-compounded and require manual claimingarrow-up-right.

Q3: What is removing liquidity?

A3: Removing liquidityarrow-up-right means redeeming LP tokens to get back the invested assets and corresponding earnings; you can choose to remove partially or entirely.

Q4: What is burning liquidity?

A4: Burning liquidityarrow-up-right usually involves sending LP tokens to a black hole address or permanently locking them via a locking contract, thereby ensuring the liquidity cannot be withdrawn.

Q5: Why can't I create liquidity?

A5: Common reasons include: the token has not approved the router contract, freeze permissions have not been revoked, token decimals are set incorrectly, or insufficient funds.

Q6: Is it mandatory to lock or burn liquidity?

A6: It is not mandatory, but many projects lock or burn part of the liquidity to increase investor and community trust.

🧩 On-chain Operations


Q1:What is MEV (Maximal Extractable Value)?

A1: MEV refers to miners, validators, or block builders obtaining extra profit by adjusting transaction ordering / inserting transactions / front- or back-running, etc. Your transactions can be affected by this behavior when they are in the mempool (before being included in a block).

Q2: What is a sandwich attack?

A2: An attacker inserts transactions before and after your transaction to exploit slippage arbitrage, causing you to get a worse execution price. You can use tools with MEV protection to split large tradesarrow-up-right, adjust slippage settings, or trade when network congestion is lighter to reduce the risk of being sandwiched.

Q3: What is multi-address bundled operation?

A3: It refers to performing bundled buysarrow-up-right or bundled sellsarrow-up-right across multiple self-owned wallets according to a unified strategy, commonly used for consolidating funds across multiple wallets or unified position building.

Q4: Why do transactions get stuck?

A4: Common reasons are setting gas fees too low or network congestion, causing transactions to remain in the mempool waiting for a long time.

Q5: How to speed up a transaction?

A5: Use SlerfTools'speed up transaction featurearrow-up-right, which resends an equivalent transaction with the same nonce but a higher gas price to replace the old one so it gets mined faster.

Q6: How to cancel a transaction?

A6: Use SlerfTools'cancel transaction featurearrow-up-right, which sends a 0 BNB transfer to your own address with the same nonce and a higher gas fee; once confirmed, the original transaction becomes invalid.

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