
Arc Payment App
A multi-chain USDC wallet for sending, bridging, swapping, and tracking balances.
Tagline
USDC payments without the chaos
The USDC command center for multi-chain payments.
Stop hopping between wallets, bridges, and exchanges.
Track stablecoins across chains without losing your mind.
The USDC command center for multi-chain payments.
This is the strongest category-defining angle because the product combines wallet, bridge, swap, balance aggregation, and history in one interface instead of acting like a single-purpose wallet.
Stop hopping between a wallet, bridge, and exchange just to move stablecoins.
The page explicitly bundles send, bridge, and swap actions, so the alternative-to framing is credible versus fragmented workflows in MetaMask, bridges, and exchanges.
Built to eliminate the mess of tracking stablecoin balances across chains.
Unified balance with confirmed and pending totals is a concrete pain-killer feature that addresses a very specific operational headache for anyone managing USDC across multiple networks.
Primary user
Crypto-native operations or finance lead managing USDC flows across testnets or early-stage payment workflows
ICP #1
Web3 startup operator running payments or treasury ops across multiple chains
Pain
Keeps jumping between wallets, bridges, and explorers to figure out where USDC is, what is confirmed, and what is still pending.
Why this solves
The unified balance view plus built-in bridge, swap, send, and history tools centralize the exact flows they currently stitch together manually.
ICP #2
Founder of a crypto app needing a simple stablecoin wallet for users
Pain
Needs a lightweight way to let users receive, send, and move USDC without forcing them through a complex exchange-style interface.
Why this solves
Arc presents a focused USDC-first workflow with QR connect, contacts, receive, and spend/deposit actions, which is simpler than a general-purpose wallet.
ICP #3
Developer or QA lead testing cross-chain payment UX before production launch
Pain
Has to validate bridge/swap flows across testnets and verify that balances and transaction history behave consistently.
Why this solves
The explicit support for Sepolia/Amoy testnets, pending vs confirmed balances, and CSV history export makes it useful as a controlled test environment for payment flows.
Strengths
- +The product scope is clear from the first screen: send, bridge, swap, unified balance, history, and contacts.
- +USDC-first positioning is obvious and specific, which is better than a vague crypto wallet pitch.
- +The unified balance concept with confirmed and pending totals is a strong differentiator if executed well.
Weaknesses
- −The page reads like a functional dashboard, not a landing page; there is no explicit value proposition, trust signal, or explanation of who it is for.
- −The language is mixed Vietnamese/English in a way that feels unfinished, which makes the product look early and unlocalized rather than intentional.
- −There is no proof of security, supported networks for mainnet use, or any social proof, which is a major problem for a payments product.
- −The product name and header do not explain the relationship to Circle App Kit, so the branding feels generic.
- −Key actions are shown, but the user journey is not; it is unclear whether this is a wallet, a payments app, or a demo.
Fix these
- Replace the current top-of-page UI with a clear headline and subheadline explaining exactly what Arc does for stablecoin payments.
- Add a trust section with supported chains, custody model, security notes, and whether this is testnet-only or production-ready.
- Show one concrete workflow example, such as 'Receive USDC, bridge to Base, spend from unified balance,' to make the product story tangible.
- Localize deliberately: either fully commit to English, fully to Vietnamese, or make the language switch obvious and professional.
- Add comparison copy against MetaMask + manual bridge tools so visitors immediately understand why this is better for stablecoin operations.
Drop-in replacement copy
Headline
USDC payments without the chaos
Send, bridge, swap, and track balances across chains in one place.
See your real balance across chains
Arc combines confirmed and pending totals into one view, so you know what is actually available. No more checking multiple wallets and explorers to piece together the answer.
Move USDC without switching tools
Send, bridge, and swap USDC to EURC from the same interface. That keeps stablecoin workflows fast and reduces mistakes caused by jumping between apps.
Keep recipients and transactions organized
Manage contacts, copy receive addresses, and export transaction history to CSV. It’s built for teams that need clean records, not just a pretty wallet screen.
Built for stablecoin operations, not speculation
Arc is focused on USDC flows across supported chains and testnets. That narrow scope makes it easier for finance leads, founders, and QA teams to use every day.
FAQ
Is Arc a trading app?
No. Arc is built for USDC payments and cross-chain operations, not casual trading or chart watching.
Which chains do you support?
Arc supports Ethereum Sepolia, Base Sepolia, Polygon Amoy, and Arbitrum Sepolia right now, with a workflow centered on USDC movement across those networks.
How does the unified balance work?
Arc shows confirmed and pending totals together so you can see what is settled and what is still in transit. That makes reconciliation much easier.
Can I export my transaction history?
Yes. You can export transaction history as CSV for bookkeeping, reconciliation, or sharing with your team.
Who is this for?
It’s for crypto-native operators, founders, and developers who need a simple place to move and track USDC across chains without the usual wallet chaos.
USDC moves are still too messy. Arc Payment App puts send, bridge, swap, balances, and history in one place. Built for crypto teams who are tired of hopping between wallets, bridges, and explorers just to move stablecoins.
I built the wallet I wanted. Not another general crypto app. A USDC-first hub for sending, bridging, swapping to EURC, and seeing confirmed vs pending balances across chains. If you run payments ops, this should feel obvious.
Five tabs to move one stablecoin. Wallet. Bridge. Explorer. Exchange. Spreadsheet. Arc collapses that into one flow for USDC teams who need to know where funds are, what cleared, and what’s still pending.
Watch USDC jump chains fast. Connect by QR → see unified balance → bridge from Sepolia to Base → send from one place. That’s the product. No exchange-style clutter. No guessing.
Ops teams hate balance guesswork. Confirmed here. Pending there. Funds on three chains and no single view. Arc gives a unified USDC balance plus CSV history so finance people can stop stitching everything together manually.
Stablecoin wallets are too generic. Arc is built for one job: moving USDC across chains without losing context. Send, bridge, swap to EURC, manage contacts, export history. That’s the whole point.
The best wallet is opinionated. Arc only cares about USDC workflows: receive, deposit, spend, bridge, and track everything across chains. Less surface area. Less confusion. Better for teams doing real payment ops.
Where did that USDC go? If your team asks that question, you need a unified balance view. Arc shows confirmed and pending totals across supported chains, plus transaction history and CSV export.
This is stablecoin ops in one screen. Balance across chains. Send USDC. Bridge USDC. Swap to EURC. Pull history. Export CSV. Built for people who actually move money, not just browse wallets.
If you use MetaMask daily, you already know the pain. Arc isn’t trying to replace every wallet feature. It’s trying to make USDC operations boring, fast, and visible. That’s the win.
Angle: USDC command center positioning
Most crypto wallets are built like Swiss Army knives. That sounds good until you’re trying to do one thing: move USDC across chains without checking five tabs and three explorers. That’s why I built Arc Payment App. It’s a USDC-first workspace for people who actually handle stablecoin flows: - send USDC - bridge across chains - swap to EURC - track confirmed vs pending balances - export transaction history - manage recipients in one place The product is intentionally narrow. I didn’t want another general wallet. I wanted a command center for stablecoin payments. If you’re running ops, treasury, QA, or product on a crypto app, you already know the pain of fragmented workflows. Arc is my answer to that. Would love feedback from anyone managing real USDC flows: what’s the one thing missing from your current setup?
Angle: pain of fragmented stablecoin operations
The worst part of stablecoin operations isn’t sending money. It’s figuring out where the money is. Is it confirmed? Is it pending? Is it on Base, Polygon, Arbitrum, or Ethereum? Did the bridge finish? Did the swap happen? People solve this with a wallet, a bridge, an explorer, a spreadsheet, and memory. That is insane. Arc Payment App is built to remove that mess. It gives you a unified USDC balance across supported chains, plus send / bridge / swap / history in one interface. This is not for casual trading. It’s for operators, founders, and teams who need stablecoin workflows to be clear and repeatable. I’m especially curious if others feel the same pain around cross-chain balance tracking. Because that problem is bigger than the tooling around it.
Angle: product story and validation ask
I shipped Arc Payment App because I kept seeing the same broken workflow in crypto teams. Someone receives USDC. Someone else bridges it. A third person checks the explorer. Finance exports data into a spreadsheet. And somehow that counts as an operating system. Arc is my attempt to make that workflow simple. It’s a web wallet focused on USDC operations: QR connect, balance view, send, bridge, swap to EURC, contacts, deposit/spend, and CSV export. The real bet here is not “another wallet.” The bet is that crypto-native teams want fewer choices and more clarity. They want one place to see what’s confirmed, what’s pending, and what can move next. If you work on stablecoin payments, I’d love to know: what would make this actually useful in your day-to-day?
No visuals for this kit yet.
Tagline
USDC wallet for sending, bridging, and tracking
Description
Arc is a USDC-first wallet for crypto teams. Send, bridge, swap to EURC, and see unified balances across chains with confirmed and pending totals.
Maker's first comment
I built Arc Payment App because I kept watching crypto teams do the same ridiculous dance every time they moved stablecoins: open a wallet, check an explorer, bridge somewhere else, open another tab, then export everything into a spreadsheet to figure out what was actually available. Arc started as a simple idea: what if the wallet itself was the control panel for USDC operations? Not a trading app. Not a general crypto dashboard. Just a focused place to receive, send, bridge, swap, and track balances across chains without losing context. The most important part for me was making the balance view useful for real ops work. Seeing confirmed and pending totals together is the kind of thing that sounds small until you’re reconciling money across chains and trying to answer “what can we use right now?” I’d love feedback from people who actually move stablecoins for a team: what’s missing, what feels unnecessary, and what would make this worth using every day?
Pinned maker comment
Looking for feedback on the core workflow: unified balance, bridge/send/swap flow, and whether the app feels focused enough for USDC ops.
Meta
Targeting crypto ops teams drowning in tabs
Hypothesis: crypto-native operators managing USDC across chains want one place to see confirmed and pending balances, then send or bridge without jumping between a wallet, bridge, and explorer. Arc is a USDC-first wallet built for that workflow.
Google Search
Search intent: multi-chain USDC wallet
Hypothesis: people searching for a multi-chain USDC wallet are trying to solve balance tracking and cross-chain transfers, not speculative trading. Arc combines send, bridge, swap, and CSV history in one USDC-focused app.
Reddit Promoted
Built for teams reconciling USDC manually
Hypothesis: operators in crypto communities are frustrated by fragmented stablecoin workflows and will click on a focused tool that reduces manual reconciliation. Arc shows unified balances, pending vs confirmed totals, and direct bridge/send flows.
Subreddits
r/SideProject
Show the build, the problem, and the exact workflow you collapsed into one app
Rules: No pure promotion; lead with what you built, why, and what you learned. Be transparent that it’s your product.
r/indiehackers
Share the founder story: why stablecoin ops is broken and what you shipped instead
Rules: Focus on lessons and metrics, not a sales pitch. Community values candid progress updates.
r/microsaas
Frame it as a narrow ops tool for a very specific workflow
Rules: Keep it relevant to SaaS-building and product strategy. Avoid generic “launching my app” posts.
r/EntrepreneurRideAlong
Document the build process and ask for feedback on positioning and acquisition
Rules: Share a journey, not just a link. People expect ongoing updates and accountability.
r/CryptoCurrency
Post a utility-focused discussion about stablecoin balance tracking across chains
Rules: Self-promo is heavily scrutinized; contribute as a discussion first, product mention second.
Communities
Post a teardown of the stablecoin ops problem, then follow up with shipping updates and customer feedback.
Join conversations about stablecoins, payments, and tooling; share product insights only when someone asks about workflow pain.
Use it to share weekly progress, screenshots, and what you learned from talking to users, not to dump launch links.
Cold outreach template
Hey {firstName} - saw you’re handling {context} and thought of Arc. It’s a USDC-first wallet for sending, bridging, swapping, and tracking balances across chains so ops teams don’t have to stitch together wallets and explorers. If you’re open, I’d love to show you the flow and get blunt feedback.
Product Hunt timing
Launch on a Tuesday at 12:01am Pacific Time. That gives you the cleanest full day of Product Hunt visibility, catches US and Europe awake, and fits this ICP because crypto operators and founders are most active on weekdays when they’re actually working through payment and treasury workflows.
Indie Hackers post ideas
- 01I built a USDC-first wallet because stablecoin ops is too fragmented
- 02What I learned from designing a unified balance view across chains
- 03Why I stopped trying to build a general crypto wallet
Competitor alternatives
Current tone of voice
Minimal, functional, and lightly playful with emoji-led labels like "⚡ Arc Payment", "💸 Gửi USDC", and "📒 Danh bạ"; it feels more like an internal utility than a polished consumer fintech app.
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