"Tokenomics" sounds like an MBA word, but the idea is simple: how coins enter circulation, how many of them there are, and how value moves around the network. For a working miner or a curious onlooker, three pieces are enough.

Supply: how many coins exist

Total supply is the count of MLRT that have already been issued by the network. Circulating supply is the subset that is actually moving around in wallets and exchanges. These numbers go up over time as miners produce new blocks. Always look at the live numbers on the network status page rather than trusting a screenshot from a forum.

Emission: how new coins are created

New MLRT is created when a miner finds a valid block and is paid the block reward. The schedule for that reward is defined by the protocol. Over the long run, emission schedules typically slow down so the supply does not grow forever. The specifics for Malairte live in the protocol itself and on the public network status, not in any marketing material.

Fees: the other revenue stream

When you send MLRT, a small fee goes to the miner who includes your transaction in a block. Today this is a small fraction of mining revenue compared with the block reward, but it is the long-term revenue model for any proof-of-work chain. As emission slows, fees become a larger share of miner income.

What is not tokenomics

A coin's price chart is not tokenomics. Influencer endorsements are not tokenomics. A roadmap PDF is not tokenomics. Tokenomics is the boring math of supply and emission. If someone talks about "strong tokenomics" without showing you those numbers, treat it as marketing.

Why this matters to a miner

If you are mining, you are paid in newly emitted MLRT plus fees. Knowing how much new MLRT enters the network per day, and what share of it your hardware can reasonably earn, is the foundation of any honest profitability calculation. Everything else is downstream of these numbers.