Imagine this: one guy rented cloud computing for just $75 and received a block reward of 3.125 BTC — that's over $200,000. Pure luck, but luck that shows how mining works in reality.



Let me try to explain the essence. When you mine, you're essentially solving a cryptographic puzzle to add a new block to the blockchain. The network awards the first to solve the problem. Usually, this involves massive industrial farms with megawatt power capacities. But sometimes, luck favors individuals.

This miner used 1 petahash per second through CKPool — a service for solo miners. His chances of winning were like finding a grain of sand on the beach. But block 938,092 was solved exactly by his machine. The profit was 2,600 times the investment — even better than a real lottery.

In general, mining is becoming more accessible. Over the past year, 21 individual miners successfully mined 66 BTC, earning about $4 million. That's 17% more than the year before. Cloud services allow renting hashing power for just a few dollars — no need to buy hardware anymore. On average, a block is found every 17 days by solo miners.

The timing was lucky. The network difficulty just increased by 15%, but before that, there was an 11% drop due to storms in the US. This temporarily made it easier to find blocks. For our lucky guy, this window was enough.

Currently, Bitcoin is around $74,000, but for two months, it has been fighting for a real breakthrough above $76,000. Market sentiment remains cautious — funding rates on one of the major exchanges have been negative for 46 days. But stories like this remind us that in crypto, the unexpected is still possible.
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