Bitcoin's scarcity. Monero's privacy.
Public scarcity — verifiable to the last coin. Private value — hidden by design.
BitMonero (BMR) runs Monero's privacy engine on Bitcoin's monetary rules. A fixed supply of 21,000,000 coins. A block reward that halves on schedule until it reaches zero — no tail emission. Proof-of-work is RandomX, so an ordinary CPU still competes with anyone. Every transaction hides its sender, receiver, and amount by default. There was no premine and no developer allocation: the genesis nonce was derived from a public Bitcoin block, so the start is timestamped and verifiable by anyone who cares to check.
BMR is CPU-mineable through RandomX — no farm, no expensive rig. Point a miner like XMRig or cpuminer at a pool and your processor starts earning and securing the network.
The pool's exact server address and port are on its Connect tab — copy them into your miner's config. Solo mining is also available at a 2% fee.
On a privacy chain the amount, the sender, and the receiver are cryptographically hidden. The explorer shows what the network reveals and blacks out what it can't. Scarcity is public. Value is private. That single idea is the whole protocol — and it's why the redaction bar runs through this page, the whitepaper, and the explorer alike.