What is Ramaris? Wallet Tracking on Base Explained

A straightforward explanation of what Ramaris does, who it's for, and how wallet tracking on Base works. Your friend told you about it — here's what you need to know.

By Ramaris Team 4 min read

Someone sent you a link to Ramaris, or maybe you saw it mentioned on Twitter or Farcaster. Here’s what it is, what it does, and whether it’s useful for you.

The Short Version

Ramaris is a wallet tracking platform for Base blockchain. You pick wallets you want to monitor, set your criteria, and get notified when those wallets make trades. That’s the core of it.

Why Would You Track Wallets?

Every transaction on Base is public. That means you can see exactly what any wallet buys, sells, and holds — in real time. Some wallets consistently demonstrate strong trading decisions. Tracking those wallets lets you see what they’re doing and use that as one input in your own research.

Think of it like this: in traditional markets, you find out what hedge funds bought 45 days after the fact (through regulatory filings). On-chain, you see it as it happens.

What Does Ramaris Actually Do?

Wallet Discovery

Ramaris maintains a leaderboard of wallets ranked by their trading performance on Base. You can browse wallets by win rate, PnL, and other metrics to find ones worth watching.

Strategy Building

A “strategy” on Ramaris is a monitoring setup. You select wallets to track, apply filters (like minimum trade value or active hours), and Ramaris watches them for you.

You can build your own strategy from scratch or copy one from the community. Many users start by copying a strategy that looks interesting and then customizing it.

Real-Time Alerts

When a wallet in your strategy makes a trade that matches your criteria, you get notified. These signals include what was traded, the USD value, and a link to explore the transaction.

This is the main reason people use Ramaris. Instead of manually checking wallet addresses throughout the day, you set up once and let the alerts come to you.

Who Uses Ramaris?

Ramaris users generally fall into a few groups:

Active DeFi traders who want to know what experienced wallets are doing on Base. They use signals as one input alongside their own analysis.

Researchers who study on-chain behavior patterns and want tools to organize and monitor wallets efficiently.

Base ecosystem participants who are already active on Base and want a deeper understanding of wallet-level activity beyond what protocol dashboards show.

New DeFi participants who use wallet tracking as a learning tool — watching what skilled wallets do to understand how experienced traders operate.

What Ramaris Is Not

Not a copy-trading platform. Ramaris shows you what wallets do. It doesn’t execute trades on your behalf. The difference matters — copy trading means automatic execution, wallet tracking means information you choose how to act on.

Not financial advice. The data is informational. A wallet buying a token is a data point, not a recommendation. Past performance doesn’t predict future results.

Not multi-chain. Ramaris focuses on Base. If you need to track wallets across many chains, you’ll want a multi-chain tool alongside Ramaris.

How Is It Different from Other Tools?

Most wallet tracking tools are multi-chain generalists. They support 20+ blockchains and provide a broad but shallow view.

Ramaris goes deep on Base:

  • Every transaction indexed: Swaps, LP events, transfers — all categorized and valued in USD
  • Performance metrics: Wallets ranked by actual trading results, not just activity
  • Strategy builder: Combine multiple wallets with custom filters into a coherent monitoring system
  • Purpose-built alerts: Notifications designed for wallet tracking, not bolted onto a portfolio viewer

For a detailed comparison with specific tools, see our articles on Ramaris vs DeBank and Best Wallet Trackers for Base.

Getting Started

The fastest way to understand Ramaris is to try it:

  1. Sign up for free — no credit card needed
  2. Follow the Quick Start guide — takes about five minutes
  3. Browse strategies and wallets to see what the community is tracking
  4. Set up your first alert and wait for signals

Most users who stick with Ramaris say the “aha moment” comes when they get their first useful alert — seeing a notable wallet make a trade in real time and having the context to understand what it means.


For informational purposes only. Not financial advice. Past wallet activity does not indicate future results.