if I were explaining blockroom to a friend, I’d say it’s a way to participate in Bitcoin mining without having to buy hardware, manage machines, or take on the complexity alone.
Most people who are curious about mining quickly realize it’s expensive, technical, and difficult to maintain as an individual. blockroom exists to change that experience by making mining collaborative — where people participate together, learn together, and grow hashpower collectively instead of operating in isolation.
It’s not about chasing guarantees or short-term outcomes. It’s about transparency, education, and contributing to the Bitcoin network in a way that’s simple, visible, and shared.
blockroom started as a conversation among people interested in Bitcoin mining who didn’t want to treat it as a solo engineering project.
Rather than each person purchasing equipment, finding hosting, managing maintenance, and learning everything independently, the idea was to form a small, structured club where participation could grow gradually and responsibly. From the beginning, the focus was on keeping everything understandable, verifiable, and rule-based with no hidden systems or promises.
What began as shared curiosity evolved into a club centered on collective hashpower, shared learning, and long-term participation.
An actual block (in orange) our miner found on 1/13/2026 - block 932101
today, blockroom is intentionally small and focused.
The structure is defined, the rules are clear, and participation grows carefully rather than quickly. Hashpower is only increased — never reduced — and all mining activity is designed to be visible either on-chain or through publicly verifiable sources.
Just as important, the community itself is forming. Members help one another better understand Bitcoin, share practical knowledge, and explore real-world use beyond price discussion. As blockroom grows, the goal is to continue building responsibly — strengthening participation, supporting education, and creating something members are proud to be part of.