On Wednesday, the network’s difficulty decreased by 4.6% at block height 862,848, giving Bitcoin miners a little respite.
The following two weeks will see a 4.6% decrease in the difficulty of locating a block subsidy compared to the 2,016 prior blocks, which had the highest difficulty level ever recorded.
The Bitcoin Mining Game: Hashrate Is Expected to Increase; Difficulty Drops
Before this modification, bitcoin’s difficulty was stable at 92.67 trillion between block heights of 860,832 and 862,848.
The anticipated daily earnings per petahash per second (PH/s) of SHA256 hashpower during that period were $41.12 per PH/s, or the hashprice.
As bitcoin (BTC) approaches $64,000, the spot hash price has increased to $45.79 per PH/s today, indicating an 11.35% rise.
At Block 862,848, the Bitcoin network’s difficulty has decreased by 4.6%.
After the most recent modification, bitcoin’s difficulty is now 88.40 trillion. In light of this, mining Bitcoin is like a very large guessing game.
To discover a number that is less than the network’s predetermined target, miners guess amounts repeatedly. Although it’s not the amount they’re guessing, 88.40 trillion demonstrates how difficult the game is.
Before they find the right answer and win the jackpot, miners must make an average of 88.40 trillion guesses at this difficulty level. Mining takes longer when the number is higher because it is tougher.
However, bitcoin miners discover that it gets slightly simpler to find blocks when the difficulty decreases like it did today.
The network is now operating at a steady 638.82 exahash per second (EH/s). The hash rate peaked on September 8, about 17 days ago, at 693 EH/s, but by September 16, it had declined by 72 EH/s. Since then, 17.82 EH/s of computing power has been available again.
The hash rate may increase further because the most recent difficulty adjustment made mining blocks easier. Furthermore, the bitcoin price increase—which is up 4.6% this week versus the US dollar—makes mining even more appealing to miners.


