Bitok Arena is a daily on-chain Bitcoin competition that runs on the Bitcoin mainnet. Every round, participants send BTC from their own wallets to a master wallet address, rank on a live leaderboard by total amount committed, and the top three addresses split 50% of the total prize pool when the round closes. No accounts required. No personal data collected. Every transaction, every position, and every payout is a real on-chain Bitcoin event independently verifiable by anyone.
The leaderboard is not a number on a platform screen. It is a reading of the Bitcoin blockchain in real time. Every position is a confirmed transaction. Every payout is an on-chain transfer to the address that earned it.
This guide covers how Bitok Arena works in full: the structure of a round, how to enter, how positions are calculated, how prizes are distributed, and why the on-chain design matters for every participant.
How a Round Works
Each round is a time-bounded competition. During the round, participants send Bitcoin from their personal wallets to the master wallet address published on the platform. Every incoming transaction is scanned from the Bitcoin blockchain — not from any internal platform record. The address that sent the BTC is recorded as the participant's identity. The total amount from each address across all their sends during the round is their cumulative position on the leaderboard.
The leaderboard updates in real time as transactions confirm on the Bitcoin network. You can send multiple transactions from the same address during a round — each confirmed transaction adds to your cumulative total. A participant who sends 0.001 BTC three times has a position of 0.003 BTC, identical to a participant who sent 0.003 BTC in a single transaction. The timing of individual sends does not affect final ranking — only the cumulative total at round close matters.
When the round closes, the leaderboard is finalized based on the blockchain state at that moment. Any transaction that was not confirmed on-chain before round close does not count toward the final ranking, regardless of when it was initiated. Using an appropriate transaction fee ensures timely confirmation — a too-low fee can leave a transaction pending beyond round close.
How to Enter Your First Round
Entering requires three things: a Bitcoin wallet that you control (not an exchange account), some BTC in that wallet, and the master wallet address from the platform. The wallet must be one where you hold the private key — the address on the leaderboard must be an address that belongs to you. Sends from exchange accounts appear on the leaderboard under the exchange address, not yours, and any prize paid to that address goes to the exchange.
Open your Bitcoin wallet and navigate to Send. Paste the master wallet address as the destination. Set the amount you want to commit to this round. Choose a transaction fee appropriate for the time remaining in the round — during normal network conditions, a standard fee confirms within 20 to 40 minutes. Confirm the transaction on your wallet and wait for blockchain confirmation. Your address appears on the leaderboard when the transaction confirms.
The entry process is a standard Bitcoin send. There is no registration step, no approval gate, no identity check. The transaction is your entry. The blockchain is the record. No additional steps exist between sending and competing.
You can add to your position during the round by sending additional transactions from the same address. Each confirmed send increases your cumulative total. Monitoring the live leaderboard lets you assess your position relative to other participants and decide whether to commit more to the round.