Bitcoin block solo miner 888,737 – With a BTC reward of $266,000 last week – stripped the story with Bitcoin mining hardware creator Futurebit.
According to a shared email posted to X, miners who brought home last week at 3.15 BTC or around $266,000 last week between fixed fees and trading fees did so in a home setup consisting of three future Apollo Miners and one bitmain SK19PRO.
“I usually set Apollo Miners to efficiency mode,” the email reads. “In colder months, I run SK19pro at 60 days during the day and 100 at night,” adding, “all else is the default settings,” besides a scheduled task that stops hashing during peak electricity hours.
That setup was enough to get the ultimate reward for the solo minor. And it’s a very unlikely victory given the large public companies and mining pools dominate the industry.
“I scrolled through the Apollo website on my phone. “I saw a panel of solo mining users.
After a while, I launched the bluewallet app on my iPhone and confirmed the suspicion that Miner had “found a block.”
Block 888737 – Short Stories
Our amazing anonymous customers who hit the final Apollo Solo block have reached out to our team and allowed us to share their epic stories with the world!
Lots more! pic.twitter.com/sp50xhut4l
– futurebit (@futurebit) March 26, 2025
“‘I found a block! I found a block!” I cried, my voice echoing through the house,” the anonymous miner wrote. “I bolted out of bed and raced a computer downstairs, there was a word in the bold, beautiful letters. The block was accepted.
Despite multiple solo scores over the last few months, the energy-intensive nature of mining usually leads to industrial-scale setups or mining pools bringing back most of the block rewards.
Futurebit offers a variety of mining products on its website for individuals seeking to pursue a home mining rig. The cheapest products start at $376 after the discount, with other miners priced at $2,100.
The company did not respond immediately Decrypt’s Request a comment.
Edited by Andrew Hayward