Overview
Cardanzo is a free Cardano analytics dashboard that lets anyone track token prices, follow a wallet, and watch one combined portfolio in a single web page. It is aimed at Cardano holders who want a quick read on the market without piecing together several different sites. The homepage ranks Cardano native tokens by price, trading volume, market value, and number of holders, and flags which assets are trending1.
Cardanzo focuses entirely on Cardano, pulling live figures straight from the network so the numbers reflect real activity. It is an early-stage project, marked version 0.75a, built and run independently by a single community member rather than a company or foundation2. Everything runs in the browser, so there is nothing to install.
Key Features
- One ranked view of the Cardano token market. A live table sorts Cardano native tokens by price, daily and weekly volume, market value, and holder counts, with a trending list at the top1.
- A portfolio that follows your money everywhere. Connect a wallet and Cardanzo adds up not just what sits in it, but also assets locked in staking, lending, and borrowing on outside Cardano apps, so positions held away from the wallet still count toward your total3.
- Broad market coverage across Cardano exchanges. Cardanzo reads prices and pools from major Cardano decentralized exchanges, including Minswap, SundaeSwap, WingRiders, MuesliSwap, VyFinance, and Splash, to build each token's picture3.
- Per-token detail pages with health signals. Each tracked token has its own page showing an order book, staking and lending stats, wallet activity, and risk-style ratings such as a Mayer Multiple, which compares the current price to a longer-term average3.
- A token holders' offering. Cardanzo is running a "Community Offering" for its own token, called CT, which funds development and unlocks gated sections of the site for holders3.
What to Expect
A visitor lands on a dark, data-heavy dashboard that looks a lot like a stock-market screener, but for Cardano tokens. The main table loads live prices and volumes, and clicking any token opens a deeper page with charts and on-chain stats. Connecting a wallet is optional and uses a one-time signature to prove ownership rather than a money-moving transaction; once connected, the portfolio and wallet-activity views fill in3.
Because Cardanzo is an early, independently built tool, expect rough edges and limited public support. There is no documentation site, no whitepaper, and the only confirmed channel beyond the app itself is an account on X1. Some advanced sections are reserved for holders of the CT token, while the core charts stay open to everyone. A separately funded feature, "bubble maps" that visualize how token holders' wallets connect to each other, is described as planned rather than finished2.
