You won a round three weeks ago and want to check the prize actually arrived. You have no account to log into, no dashboard, no history page — and that absence is not a gap in the platform, it's the design. Bitok Arena tracks competition by Bitcoin address, not by person, and your full history — every entry sent, every prize received — exists permanently on the public blockchain. That matters beyond curiosity: regular participants need their return over time to size entries sensibly, anyone can verify a prize actually paid out, and none of it requires the platform's cooperation. The tracking tool is a block explorer, and it needs nothing from Bitok Arena to work.
The blockchain does not forget. Every BTC transaction from your address to the Bitok Arena master wallet, and every prize payment from the master wallet back to your address, is in the permanent public record — searchable by anyone with your address and a block explorer.
Retrieving that full history takes nothing more than your wallet address and a public block explorer. No login, no export request, no waiting on the platform to pull records for you.
Reading Your History From a Block Explorer
Open any Bitcoin block explorer — Mempool.space, Blockchair, or Blockchain.com are all suitable. Enter your competition address in the search field. The explorer will display all transactions associated with that address: every incoming and outgoing transaction, with timestamps, amounts, and confirmation counts. Your Bitok Arena entries appear as outgoing transactions to the master wallet address. Your prize payments appear as incoming transactions from the master wallet address. Both sides of every round you participated in — entry and prize, if applicable — are in this record.
Reading your Bitok Arena history from a block explorer:
Outgoing transactions to master wallet — each entry you sent to the Bitok Arena master wallet address appears as an outgoing transaction from your address; the timestamp shows when the transaction was broadcast, the confirmation time shows when it was included in a block, and the amount shows your entry size for that round.
Incoming transactions from master wallet — each prize payment appears as an incoming transaction from the Bitok Arena master wallet to your address; these transactions confirm that a prize was paid, the amount paid, and the exact timestamp of the payout.
Reconstructing round history — by grouping your outgoing transactions to the master wallet by date, you can identify which round each entry belonged to and whether an incoming transaction from the master wallet followed within the payout window after round close.
Multiple entries per round — if you sent more than one transaction from the same address during a single round, all of them count as one combined position (the sum is your leaderboard entry); they appear as separate transactions in the block explorer history but represent a single accumulated position for that round.
The full history is there from your first entry. Nothing is hidden, nothing is lost, and nothing requires the platform to cooperate with your query.
The timestamp reading requires attention to timezone consistency. Block explorers display transaction timestamps in a fixed reference time by default on most interfaces, though some offer local time conversion. When reconstructing round history, confirm you are reading timestamps in the same reference time to correctly assign each transaction to the right competition window. A transaction broadcast late in one round belongs to a different round than one broadcast shortly after the next round begins, even though the wall clock in many timezones might show them both as "evening."
Using Address History for Strategy
The complete transaction history from a consistent competition address is a dataset for understanding your competition performance over time. Total BTC entered across all rounds, total BTC received as prizes, net position (prizes minus entries), and round-by-round performance are all calculable from the raw blockchain data. For participants who want to optimize entry sizing or frequency, this historical view provides the actual numbers rather than estimated performance based on incomplete recollection.
What you can calculate from blockchain competition history:
Total entries and total prizes — sum all outgoing transactions to the master wallet for total entered; sum all incoming transactions from the master wallet for total prize income received; the difference is your net competition result over the tracked period.
Win rate — count rounds where a prize incoming transaction followed your entry; divide by total rounds entered; this is your historical prize rate, which informs realistic expectations for future competition frequency.
Optimal entry sizing patterns — review which entry amounts correlated with prize wins versus non-wins; while leaderboard outcomes depend on all participants, historical data may reveal patterns about which entry levels typically compete effectively in the rounds you have participated in.
Round timing patterns — examine the timestamps of your prize wins versus non-wins; if prizes correlate with earlier-in-round entries (giving more time to adjust position) versus later entries, this informs timing strategy for future rounds.
The blockchain provides raw data. The strategy interpretation is yours to apply.
The privacy dimension of this transparency is worth naming directly. Your competition history is publicly visible to anyone who knows your competition address. This is the same transparency that makes Bitok Arena's results verifiable — the same blockchain openness that lets you confirm prize payments also means that anyone with your address can view the same history. Participants who want to maintain more privacy across rounds can use different addresses for different rounds, though this prevents automatic aggregation of multi-transaction entries within a single round.
No Platform Copy of Your History
Most participants find that the verification benefit of consistent address usage outweighs the privacy tradeoff. Your competition history is on the blockchain — not on a Bitok Arena server, not in a database the platform could lose or alter.
The blockchain is a better record-keeper than any platform database. It does not forget, cannot be edited, and requires no login to query. Your full Bitok Arena history is there, exactly as it happened.
Use a block explorer and your address to retrieve it at any time. The record has been there the whole time — you just have to look.
Your full Bitok Arena competition history — every entry sent, every prize received — is on the Bitcoin blockchain permanently, accessible to anyone with your address and a block explorer. No platform cooperation required, no account login, no data request. Open Mempool.space or any block explorer, enter your competition address, and read every round you have ever participated in. Then send your BTC to the master wallet and add today's entry to that record.