Relax. Everything here is straightforward.
If something went sideways — you'll find the answer below.
Any wallet that lets you send BTC to an external address will work. The most widely used options:
During setup you'll receive a seed phrase — 12 or 24 words. Write it down on paper. Store it somewhere safe, offline. That phrase is the only key to your funds. Nobody can recover it for you if it's lost.
Buy it on any crypto exchange — Binance, Kraken, Coinbase, or a local exchange available in your country.
The process: create an account → deposit funds → buy BTC → withdraw to your wallet.
That last step — withdraw to your wallet — is the one most people skip. Don't skip it. BTC sitting on an exchange is not in your wallet. You can't use it to enter the competition from there.
Technically yes — but we strongly recommend against it.
When you send from an exchange, the transaction often goes out from a shared address that belongs to the exchange — not to you. That address appears in the leaderboard, not yours. You lose the ability to add to your position during the round, and if you win, the reward goes to that shared address — which the exchange controls, not you.
Withdraw your BTC to your own wallet first. Then send from there. It takes one extra step and removes all the complications.
Select Native SegWit (Bech32) — also shown as Bitcoin Native SegWit or BTC (SegWit) in most wallets and exchanges. This is the right choice:
Our master wallet operates on Native SegWit. If you see addresses starting with bc1 — that's it. That's the one.
There's no minimum requirement. Any amount puts you on the leaderboard.
The practical question is where that amount places you relative to other participants. Open the leaderboard before sending — look at the current positions and the gaps between them. A small gap above you is an opportunity. A large gap is a signal to reconsider your entry amount or timing.
Start with what you're comfortable committing. You can always add more from the same address later.
Most wallet apps set the fee automatically — you can leave it on the default recommended setting.
If your wallet lets you choose manually: a standard or medium fee is fine for most situations. A low fee might mean your transaction takes longer to confirm. If the network is busy and you want faster confirmation, choose a higher fee.
When in doubt — use the recommended fee your wallet suggests. It's calibrated to current network conditions.
First — check whether the transaction used your personal withdrawal address or a shared exchange address.
If you have a dedicated withdrawal address on that exchange that is yours alone, you may be fine — check the leaderboard to see if your address appears.
If the address shown in the leaderboard belongs to the exchange — the reward, if won, would go to the exchange. In that case, contact your exchange's support to arrange a manual transfer to your wallet.
Going forward: withdraw to your personal wallet first, then send from there.
No. Bitcoin transactions are irreversible once confirmed on the blockchain.
Before confirming any transaction, always double-check the destination address — paste it, then verify the first and last several characters match what's shown on the Bitok Arena platform.
Nothing is wrong. Your transaction just needs confirmations. Bitok Arena requires 3 Bitcoin network confirmations before your address appears. This typically takes between a few minutes and half an hour.
To check your status right now:
No action needed. Just wait.
Your wallet shows a transaction ID (also called TXID or transaction hash) right after you send. It looks like a long string of letters and numbers.
Take that ID, go to any Bitcoin blockchain explorer (search for one in your browser), paste the ID into the search field. You'll see everything: confirmation count, timestamp, sending address, receiving address, amount. All public. All real-time.
This means the transaction is waiting in the network's queue — it hasn't been picked up by a miner yet. Usually this happens when the fee was set too low during a period of high network traffic.
Most wallets allow you to speed up a pending transaction by bumping the fee (RBF — Replace by Fee). Check your wallet's settings or transaction history for this option.
If you don't have that option, the transaction will eventually confirm on its own — it just might take longer. Bitcoin transactions don't disappear. They confirm sooner or later.
Not at all — this is exactly how it's supposed to work.
All transactions from the same address during the same round are automatically combined. Each new transaction from your address increases your total and updates your position in the leaderboard. You can add to your position as many times as you want during the round.
Open the leaderboard. Look at the gap between your current position and the one above. If the difference is small, a single additional transaction from the same address can move you back up.
If the gap is large — consider whether it's worth the additional commitment at this stage of the round, or whether holding your current position is the better play.
Either way, you still have time. The round runs until 23:59:59 UTC.
Send another transaction from the same Bitcoin address you used to enter. That's all.
The system automatically adds it to your existing total. Your new combined amount determines your updated position in the leaderboard. No special steps needed.
Every round ends at 23:59:59 UTC. A new one begins immediately at 00:00 UTC.
The leaderboard freezes at the closing second. The positions at that moment are final. Rewards are distributed to the top-ranked addresses after the round closes.
Rewards are sent to winning Bitcoin addresses after each round closes. They go directly to the address that participated — the same address you used to enter. No withdrawal process. No forms. No verification. The Bitcoin simply arrives in your wallet.
Every reward payment is a standard Bitcoin transaction on the public blockchain.
To verify: take the winning address from the Bitok Arena leaderboard results, paste it into any Bitcoin blockchain explorer, and look at the outgoing transactions after the round closed. The amounts, timing, and destination addresses are all visible. Publicly. Permanently.
No trust required — just check.