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Just checked the latest Pi Network stats and there's some interesting data here. So we're talking about over 10 billion Pi coins already mined as of now, with around 10 billion in actual circulation. Pretty wild considering where this started. The thing everyone's asking about is when will pi mining end, and honestly, it's not as straightforward as you might think.
Let me break down how the total supply actually works. The max cap is set at 100 billion Pi coins, but it's divvied up pretty specifically. About 65 billion is earmarked for mining rewards to keep people engaged with the network. Then there's 10 billion going toward ecosystem development to support apps and community projects. Another 5 billion is locked up in liquidity pools to stabilize trading. And the remaining 20 billion goes to the core team for their ongoing work.
Now here's where it gets tricky with the mining timeline. There's no fixed date stamped on when everything stops. The mining will keep going until all 65 billion allocated for rewards gets fully distributed, but the speed depends entirely on how fast the network grows and how active users are. Mining rates scale with network participation, so if adoption picks up, you could see rewards distributed faster. If it slows, mining drags on longer.
So to answer when will pi mining end - realistically, nobody can give you an exact date. It's all tied to network growth metrics and user activity levels. Once that 65 billion reward pool runs dry though, that's when the mining engine shuts down. The Pi Network isn't disappearing anytime soon, but keeping track of network growth is your best indicator for gauging how much longer mining might continue. Worth watching if you're active in the ecosystem.