94.3% of all Bitcoin that will ever exist has already been mined. But here’s where it gets truly fascinating…

What comes next could redefine economics as we know it.

Right now, Bitcoin miners earn $28M daily to secure the network. Fast forward to 2140, and that reward drops to zero—completely gone.

Here’s where it gets interesting:

Only 1.2M BTC remain to be mined—fewer than the number of millionaires in Japan.

Miners rely on block rewards for 98.2% of their revenue.

Transaction fees contribute just 1.8% ($500K daily).

An estimated 2-3M BTC are already lost forever due to forgotten passwords.

The real question isn’t about price—it’s about sustainability:

Can Bitcoin survive without block rewards? Will transaction fees skyrocket, making it more expensive than an international wire transfer? Or will network security collapse, funded by crumbs compared to its trillion-dollar valuation?

We’re essentially betting on future generations willingly paying luxury prices for basic transactions.

It’s like building the world’s most valuable network with the hope that security will somehow sustain itself in a world of diminishing rewards.

Are we watching the slowest-burning crisis in economic history? Or is Bitcoin’s game theory robust enough to withstand this ticking time bomb?

Let’s hear your take. Is Bitcoin’s future as bright as it seems, or are we turning a blind eye to its biggest challenge?