If you are trying to recover access to old crypto, the most valuable artifact on the machine may not be a wallet file. It may be a seed phrase backup hidden inside a text document, setup note, password hint, or exported recovery file.
What seed backups usually look like
- A text file with twelve or twenty-four words
- A note exported from a wallet setup session
- A document in a backup folder with vague names like
importantornotes - A screenshot, PDF, or copied setup checklist
- A password manager export or notebook sync file
Where to search on an old Windows machine
- Desktop, Documents, Downloads, and old archive folders
- Cloud-sync folders such as OneDrive, Dropbox, and similar backups
- USB drives and external disks used for migrations or long-term storage
- Old note exports, password vault exports, and general backup directories
Users rarely store recovery words under perfect labels. Good search terms include seed, mnemonic, recovery, 12 words, 24 words, wallet names, and setup dates you remember.
How CryptoTrace helps with seed phrase searches
CryptoTrace can scan old Windows folders, drives, and backups for seed-like text patterns and related wallet artifacts in one local pass. That helps when you know you once backed something up but do not remember whether it was a wallet file, a note, or a copied recovery phrase.