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Welcome to Marsa Chain

This is the official channel for the Marsa network — a blockchain where mining works differently from Bitcoin or Ethereum.

Here, victory doesn't go to whoever has the most powerful GPU or the most expensive ASIC. It goes to whoever plays by the network's rules.

If you're new to Marsa, start with this post. Below is a plain-language intro: what the network is, how coins are "mined," and why a regular smartphone can be a full mining tool.

What is Marsa Chain?

Marsa Chain is a blockchain with its own coin, MRS.

The network runs on validators and miners: some confirm blocks, others find valid solutions (hashes) and earn rewards.

The main difference in Marsa is that mining is tied to your participation in the network, not to raw hardware power.

You can't just buy a powerful machine and "out-shout" everyone else. First you need to join the game — through a special transaction called MINER_STAKE.

How does mining work in Marsa?

Think of it not as a GPU race, but as a lottery with tickets you get from your stake.

Step 1 — Stake (MINER_STAKE)
You send a MINER_STAKE transaction to the network and lock part of your MRS for a set period. It's proof you intend to mine honestly. The network sees that you're a real participant.

Step 2 — Hash generation credits
From your staked amount, the network calculates how many attempts (credits) you get. One credit = one hash attempt.
The larger your stake, the more credits you receive per period. Credits are not unlimited: they refill on a schedule defined by the network.

Step 3 — Tap and find a hash
In the app (Telegram Mini App or Android client), you tap the mining button. The app receives a challenge from the node — a task with a fixed difficulty. Your job is to find a hash that meets the network's conditions.

Step 4 — Reward
If the hash is valid and the network accepts it, you receive MRS for the block.

Why doesn't powerful hardware help much?

In classic mining (Bitcoin and others), speed is everything: whoever computes more hashes per second wins more often.

In Marsa, network limits apply:

  • you only have a limited number of credits from your stake;
  • the node gives you challenges one at a time, not thousands of parallel tasks;
  • you can't bypass the rules by plugging in 10 GPUs or a mining farm.

A faster phone or PC only helps you check hashes a bit faster within your current challenge and credits. It's not a "hashrate war" — it's mining within your allotted limit. The network stays fair: a beginner on a phone and someone on a powerful PC play by the same rules. The difference is speed inside one "ticket," not unlimited tickets without a stake.

Classic mining: buy an ASIC → run 24/7 → the strongest wins.
Marsa Chain: create MINER_STAKE → get a limited number of attempts → luck and rules decide within that limit. Hardware matters a little; stake, credits, and honest verification matter most.

Why is it built this way?

  • Accessibility — anyone with a phone can mine, not only people with expensive gear.
  • Network control — limits and stake reduce spam and abuse.
  • Transparency — rules are in the protocol: rewards, halvings, credit cost, stake duration.
  • Decentralization — validators and miners take part in consensus; the developer doesn't move coins for you.

What you'll find in this channel

  • Network news and app updates
  • Explainers on stake, credits, and rewards
  • Answers to common questions
  • Links to the Mini App and documentation

Welcome to Marsa Chain.
Mining starts with a cofee break!

The network has just launched.

The first 100 miners will receive 10,000 coins each for mining.