Mission Map
BTCMobick mission map
Follow the route from Bitcoin block 556759 to the legacy migration record at 556760, then to the current BTCMobick mainnet that starts at height 0 after New Bedford.
This is the first module for someone who has never studied Bitcoin, starting with the easiest words: money, ledger, network, and private key.
Explains in everyday language blocks, hashes, previous blocks, and confirmations to show why blockchain is a 'ledger with order'.
First, BTCMobick clarifies that public-good allocation is not a general shared tool but a separate supply connected to free distribution, sunk costs, and supply reconciliation.
First, establish the background of the person who created BTCMobick. This is not about idolizing a figure, but understanding from what Bitcoin perspective the project originated.
Based on Ohtaemin's books and official introduction, this lesson organizes the questions that existed before BTCMobick. The core is to read Bitcoin not as a technical product but as a change in trust and money.
Helps someone new to BTCMobick first understand it in three lines as 'a PoW coin forked from Bitcoin,' 'an experiment to verify dormant Bitcoin,' and 'a community-created culture.'
Follow the official About history section to understand in chronological order the 2019 hard fork, initial halt, 2022 mining restart, and 2023 BTCMobick naming.
This covers the flow of BTCMobick spreading from online explanations to offline participation experiences through book-included experience kits, on-site airdrops, and paper wallets.
Nationwide Mobick Halls, local chat rooms, community websites, and blogs are read not as fact-confirming evidence but as contextual materials showing project culture and touchpoints.
Understand how BTCMobick explains trust, governance, and community consensus through the official About-recorded public-good allocation supply sealing and lockup events.
Explains why 556759 and 556760 appear together in the Bitcoin 10th anniversary fork description and separates the criteria to avoid mixing with the current mainnet.
We organize the previous BTCMobick ledger, the current mainnet height 0, and the February 2026 migration period as the flow marking the start of the new mainnet.
On February 17, 2026, we read together the official News and About, current ledger verification data, and migration criteria for the New Bedford upgrade.
Before handling the BTCMobick wallet, build a foundation for reading transactions by distinguishing UTXOs, addresses, change, and confirmation counts.
This module involves looking up a txid in the lab, then interpreting the resulting JSON from the perspectives of input, output, confirmations, and explorer link.
Separates the roles of educational sites, explorers, and wallet apps, and organizes the security standards that beginners must follow first.
We read the official News articles on the 2025–2026 Crypto Circuit, crypto literacy, and stablecoin payment adoption as recent BTCMobick education and field expansion trends.
Record the strategic partnership with New Frontier Labs officially posted on April 6, 2026, as a recent development, while separating confirmed scope and interpretation.
Read the official News UTXO and Consol articles from April 8, 2026, in the context of recent content direction, and connect the UTXO education and Consol direction in the hands-on lab.
We explain whale hunting, the core narrative of BTCMobick, in beginner-friendly language. First, understand the flow of long-immobile Bitcoin UTXOs, private key proof, and unclaimed coins.
This lesson explores Bitcoin's strengths and weaknesses from the perspective of money as a ledger. It especially explains why the uncertainty about whether early coins are still active connects to the BTCMobick whale hunting discourse.
Connects the Bitcoin community's post-quantum migration debate with BTCMobick whale hunting's ledger discourse. Classifies it as proposals and debates under review, not activated rules.
We examine why dollar stablecoins like USDT and USDC became the payment and settlement rails of crypto, and revisit Bitcoin and BTCMobick's role as ledgers on top of that.
We interpret the Ethereum RWA flow not as a price theme but as an experiment where real-world assets and public ledgers meet. BTCMobick's Metanomia and the discourses on Base, Binance Chain, and MOVN/Mobvn divide confirmed scopes and areas requiring review.
Based on the official Future's enterprise blockchain explanation, this summarizes BTCMobick's direction for enterprise adoption in simple terms.
Learn about BTCMobick Consol by analogy to the perpetual interest flow of British Consol bonds, self-custody wallets, long-term holding incentives, and execution conditions not yet disclosed.
We organize the criteria for reading statements, wallet seals, lockups, supply summaries, and initial criticisms about the public-good allocation separately from ledger verification.


























