Dogecoin [DOGE] is a Bitcoin fork released in late 2013.
Although not as popular as it once was, Dogecoin has continued to attract social media users due to its fast transactions, low fees and, of course, its charismatic Shiba Inu mascot.
Despite being a Bitcoin clone with just a few modified parameters, unlike BTC, Dogecoin is uncapped. Therefore, DOGE has infinite supply and will never halve rewards again. Unless this governance decision changes, and until further notice, the last Dogecoin halving happened in 2015.
Justification for Uncapping DOGE
Some users questioned how Dogecoin could achieve high value if its supply was infinite. Overall, the Doge community decided that although there’d be infinite supply, natural coin losses would be made up for through the constant supply.
This way Doge could be used more like a spending currency than a deflationary store of value.
Original Dogecoin Halvings
Until 2015, Dogecoin halvings happened every 100k blocks or approximately every 69 days.
Doge will no longer halve block rewards and will produce the same amount of new coins per block for as long as it is mined.
Block Reward
The now perpetual Dogecoin block reward is 10k DOGE every block.
With 1 minute block time, 14.4 million new DOGE enter the market every day.