The network status page is the most honest source of economic information about Malairte, because every figure on it comes straight from the chain. Marketing can spin; the chain cannot. This walkthrough shows what to look at and what each number actually means for your mining.

Step 1: Find the block reward

This is how much new MLRT each block currently pays. It is the top of your revenue calculation. Note it down, because a scheduled halving will change it, and you want to know your starting point.

Step 2: Read the network hashrate

Total network hashrate tells you how much competition you face. Your share of rewards is roughly your hashrate divided by the network total. If network hashrate is climbing, your slice is shrinking even when your own hardware is unchanged.

Step 3: Check the difficulty

Difficulty moves with network hashrate to keep block timing steady. A rising difficulty trend is the clearest signal that the same hardware will earn less going forward. Treat the current difficulty as a snapshot, and the trend as the more useful number.

Step 4: Look at block time

Compare the actual average block time to the target. If blocks are coming faster than target, difficulty will rise soon; if slower, it will fall. This gives you a short-term read on which way your economics are about to move.

Step 5: Note circulating supply

  • Circulating supply shows how many MLRT are already in the wild.
  • Its rate of change reflects current emission, which is the block reward times blocks per day.
  • Compared against max supply, it shows how far through the emission curve the network is.

Step 6: Combine into a read

Put it together: high and rising hashrate plus rising difficulty means a more competitive, lower-per-miner environment. Falling hashrate and difficulty means the opposite. None of this predicts price; it describes the mining environment you are about to operate in, which is exactly what you need to plan honestly.

What to ignore

Ignore any third-party dashboard quoting these numbers without linking to the chain. Use the authoritative network status so you know the figures are real rather than copied, stale, or invented.