Request Giwa Sepolia tokens for Sepolia-based chain testing, wallet setup, contracts, and dApp practice
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Giwa Sepolia gives users a dedicated test environment for EVM-compatible activity tied to the Giwa network. It is useful for checking wallet setup, gas behavior, contract calls, and application flows.
Alan Faucet provides the test tokens that make those actions possible. A connected wallet still cannot submit state-changing transactions until it has gas on the correct chain.
Limits are part of the reliability plan. They help distribute tokens across real users who need small amounts for testing rather than repeated automated claims.
Sepolia-based networks can feel familiar because addresses and tools often resemble Ethereum workflows. The important detail is that each chain still has its own network selection, gas balance, and explorer context.
Giwa Sepolia testing helps users practice those distinctions. A transaction sent on one Sepolia-related network will not appear as a balance on another just because the address matches.
The faucet supports this learning by funding the correct environment. Once the wallet shows Giwa Sepolia tokens, users can focus on the dApp or contract being tested.
Paste a public wallet address and confirm that the wallet can switch to Giwa Sepolia. Add the network manually if needed.
Do not use private keys or seed phrases in any faucet workflow. The only required wallet information is the public receiving address.
After funding, run a small test transaction and save the hash. It gives you a reference point if a dApp later reports a confusing state.
EVM compatibility does not mean every network behaves identically in the user interface. RPC timing, explorer support, gas symbols, and app configuration can all differ.
Giwa Sepolia provides a controlled place to catch those differences. Developers can verify network detection, contract addresses, and transaction handling before sending users to a live environment.
For learners, the network is a good exercise in careful chain selection, one of the most important habits in Web3.
Balance on wrong Sepolia: select Giwa Sepolia specifically, not Ethereum Sepolia.
App rejects network: reconnect after switching chains so the dApp detects Giwa Sepolia.
Explorer cannot find hash: use the explorer intended for Giwa Sepolia.
Claim limit reached: wait for cooldown rather than trying repeated submissions.
Contract address invalid: confirm the contract was deployed to Giwa Sepolia.
It sends Giwa Sepolia testnet tokens to public wallet addresses for gas and testing.
No. They may share familiar tooling, but balances and contracts are network-specific.
Use any compatible wallet that supports adding or selecting Giwa Sepolia.
The same address can hold different balances on different networks.
No. They are only for testnet activity.
Confirm network, balance, and transaction hash before testing a dApp.