The Bitok Arena leaderboard is the complete information environment for any competition decision. Everything visible on it is updated in real time from Bitcoin blockchain data — no delay, no platform-side manipulation, no numbers that exist only in a database. Reading it correctly before sending a transaction is what the information is there for. Here is what each part of the display shows and what it means for the decision you are about to make.
The leaderboard is not a summary of what might happen — it is a live record of what has already happened on the Bitcoin blockchain. Every address and every amount shown has been confirmed by miners into a Bitcoin block. The only thing that changes from one moment to the next is new transactions confirming and updating the standings.
The Address Column
Each row on the leaderboard shows a truncated Bitcoin address — typically the first and last characters of a bc1q Native SegWit address. This is the sending address of the competition entry: the address from which BTC was sent to the master wallet. When you enter a round, your address appears in this column after three confirmations. The full address is visible on any Bitcoin block explorer by looking up the master wallet address and reviewing its incoming transactions.
The position (rank) next to the address reflects the ordering by total BTC committed. First place holds the largest total. The ranking updates automatically each time a new transaction confirms. An address currently in second place may move to first if it commits more BTC — or may be displaced by another address that enters with a larger total.
The address column tells you the competitive landscape as it stands. The prize pool column tells you what that competition is worth — and that number is the starting point for any rational entry decision.
The Prize Pool and What It Tells You
The prize pool counter shows the total BTC committed to the current round so far — the sum of all competition entries confirmed on-chain during the round window. This number grows in real time as new entries confirm. The three prize amounts (25%, 15%, 10%) are calculated from this pool and update automatically as the pool grows.
The prize pool is the most important strategic variable before deciding to enter. A large pool indicates active competition — multiple addresses have committed significant amounts. A small pool may indicate either an early-round moment (competition is still building) or a genuinely low-activity round. The time remaining, visible as a countdown to round close, provides the other dimension: how much of the round has already elapsed and how much opportunity remains for the standings to change.
The gap between positions is the tactical variable. The difference in BTC between first and second place tells you how much you would need to commit to move from second to first — or to stay in first if you are already there and a challenger is building. This number changes throughout the round. Watching it approach and recede as participants add to their positions is the live game that the leaderboard makes visible.
The leaderboard shows the current state of a competition that settles on-chain at a fixed time. Every number on it is derived from Bitcoin blockchain data. The prize pool is real BTC. The addresses are real addresses. The gaps between positions are real amounts. Nothing is estimated or projected. Reading the leaderboard correctly means reading exactly what the blockchain currently records — and making a decision based on that information.
Before your first entry, spend one complete round cycle watching the leaderboard without committing anything. Observe how positions change, how the prize pool grows, and when the most significant moves tend to happen. That observation is free information — and it changes the quality of every subsequent entry decision.
Address, rank, BTC committed, prize pool, time remaining. Five data points, all derived from the Bitcoin blockchain, all updated in real time, all visible before you send a single satoshi. The leaderboard exists so that decisions made on it are informed ones.