# Into: DogeLayer

DogeLayer points existing Scrypt mining rigs at Bittensor, letting LTC and DOGE miners earn a subnet token for the same hashrate they already produce.

// Scrypt miners, meet Bittensor

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> New to Bittensor? Start here. Experienced users can skip to the full analysis.

### What is DogeLayer?

DogeLayer is a Bittensor subnet built around proof-of-work mining hashrate for the Scrypt algorithm, the same algorithm that secures Litecoin (LTC) and Dogecoin (DOGE). It runs as a mining pool: rigs connect to a stratum endpoint and contribute hashpower, and that contribution is measured on-chain.

**The simple version:** It's like a Litecoin mining pool, but with a second payout layer. You point your Scrypt ASIC at it, keep earning LTC/DOGE, and if your miner is registered on the subnet you also accrue a Bittensor token for the hashpower you provide.

**Centralized equivalent:** Traditional Scrypt pools like Litecoinpool, ViaBTC, Prohashing, or F2Pool. DogeLayer adds a Bittensor reward layer on top of the conventional pool model.

**How it works:**
- **Miners** contribute Scrypt mining hashrate to the pool through a stratum connection, using their subnet hotkey as the worker username.
- **Validators** rank and weight miners by the share-value, the hashpower, they produce over each period.

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### Why This Matters

- **The problem it solves:** Scrypt mining hardware is single-purpose. It hashes LTC/DOGE and does nothing else. DogeLayer gives that same hashpower a second, parallel reward stream without asking miners to buy new equipment or switch chains.
- **The opportunity:** Scrypt ASICs are a large, established hardware base. A pool that bridges that existing capacity into Bittensor is reaching miners who already own the gear, rather than competing for general-purpose GPUs.
- **The Bittensor advantage:** The subnet uses Bittensor's on-chain weighting to measure and reward contributed hashpower, so the second reward layer settles through the protocol rather than through a single pool operator's private ledger.
- **Traction signals:** The on-chain identity reports a small set of active miners and a live stratum pool at sn80-stratum.dogelayer.ai. This is early. The product surface exists and is documented, but the participant base is still small.

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## Full Analysis

**Category:** Other (Proof-of-Work Mining) | **Centralized Competitor:** Litecoinpool, ViaBTC, Prohashing, F2Pool

Scrypt mining is a mature, commoditized market. Hashrate flows to whichever pool offers the best combination of fees, reliability, and payout. DogeLayer's pitch is differentiation through an added incentive: the same hashpower earns its normal LTC/DOGE plus a Bittensor subnet token. According to the subnet's repository, the project recently moved onto subnet slot 80 (its commit history shows a migration from an earlier slot), so the current on-chain home is relatively new.

**Mechanism:**

Per the DogeLayer repository, the subnet runs two independent reward systems. The first is conventional mining revenue: miners earn LTC/DOGE from the hashpower they contribute, but the README is explicit that all mining rewards are first collected by the platform and then redistributed, with miners setting withdrawal addresses on the DogeLayer website and requesting payouts that process in one to three business days. The second is the Bittensor layer: miners registered on subnet 80 accrue alpha, the subnet's own token, based on the hashpower value they provide.

On the Bittensor side the flow follows the standard protocol. Validators evaluate miners and set weights according to the share-value each miner produces, and those weights determine how the subnet's alpha emissions are distributed. As with every subnet, both TAO and alpha are injected into the subnet's pool each block, and at the end of each tempo the accumulated alpha is distributed to participants under the protocol's fixed split. Miners can hold the alpha they accrue or swap it to TAO through the pool. The repository describes validators as running with a recommended stake in the single-digit TAO range and a pre-configured subnet proxy.

On the numbers, the alpha trades around 0.00370 TAO with a market cap near 5,590 TAO and a pool holding roughly 1,428 TAO of depth. The subnet's emission share sits near 0.35 percent, with a smoothed (EMA) share closer to 0.48 percent. Development is in Python across two contributors, and the public repository shows work through the first quarter of 2026, including the move onto subnet 80 and Docker packaging for the validator. The project also publishes a direct contact address and a Discord, and points to dogelayer.ai for the pool and withdrawal interface.

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### Risk Factors

- **Platform custody of mining rewards:** By the repository's own description, LTC/DOGE mining rewards are collected by the DogeLayer platform first and redistributed on a manual-withdrawal basis. That is a centralization and counterparty point: the off-chain payout leg depends on the operator, not the chain.
- **Competition:** Scrypt pooling is a crowded, established market. Miners weigh fees and reliability closely, and the Bittensor reward layer has to be worth more than any added friction of registering and running subnet software.
- **Liquidity:** The pool is thin, with depth around 1,428 TAO against a market cap near 5,590 TAO. Entering or exiting alpha positions can move the price, and slippage is a real cost on a pool this size.
- **Concentration:** A gini coefficient near 0.75 across the top positions points to concentrated ownership or stake distribution, where large positions can swing pool dynamics.
- **Deregistration:** Subnets with persistently low emission share are the ones at risk once their immunity period ends. DogeLayer's emission share is small, so sustained net staking inflows matter for keeping the slot.
- **External dependency:** Rewards are tied to LTC/DOGE mining economics, a separate market with its own price and difficulty cycles that sit outside Bittensor.

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