What Coldware says it is building

Coldware positions itself as a hardware and software ecosystem powered by blockchain technology. Its official materials describe a Layer-1 Proof-of-Stake network, a native COLD token, Coldware Wallet, Coldware Chat, DeFi tools, minting services, a dVPN, a dApp store, and hardware products including the Larna 2400 Web3 mobile device and Coldbook.

That is a broad roadmap. A project trying to build a chain, wallet, device stack, privacy products, gaming tools, and DeFi rails needs stronger delivery evidence than a narrower presale. Readers should separate what is already live from what remains planned, branded, or dependent on future development.

Tokenomics and presale numbers

Coldware's whitepaper lists a maximum supply of 21 billion COLD. It allocates 10.5 billion COLD, or 50% of supply, to the presale. Other listed allocations include 20% for ecosystem liquidity, 10% for exchange partnerships, 8% for staking rewards, 7.3% for developer grants, 3% for small entrepreneur onboarding, and 1.7% for the team.

The same whitepaper lists a starting price of $0.0045. During this review, the public tokenomics page described Stage 1 as live, while the sale counters and current-price fields in the fetched page markup appeared as zeroed values. That makes direct verification important: check the live presale page, payment assets, wallet prompts, and current stage before treating any price as current.

Roadmap items to watch

Coldware's roadmap marks an early stage as completed and labels Stage 2 as current. Items around that stage include security audits, a Larna 2400 campaign, community activity, coin-tracker listings, wallet development, testnet work, and a block explorer.

Later roadmap items include testnet launch, a test COLD Proof-of-Stake mechanism, payment-channel work, Larna 2400 lite-node development, Coldbook full-node development, a staking calculator, Coldware Chat, dVPN architecture, and cross-chain dApp integration. These are useful milestones to track because they move the review from claims toward visible delivery.

Risk checks before using the sale page

Before connecting a wallet, readers should verify the official domain, the token contract or claim process, accepted networks, accepted payment assets, vesting terms, refund rules, and whether any smart contracts match the scope of a published third-party audit. Hardware-linked crypto projects also add manufacturing, shipping, support, and device-security risk.

The affiliate link in this article should be treated as an access link, not as a safety signal. Presales can change pricing, terms, liquidity, and delivery timelines quickly. Do not use a partner link, social proof, or roadmap language as a substitute for contract checks and independent research.