Emission Schedule
Definition
An emission schedule defines how new coins are created and distributed over time. It specifies block rewards, halving intervals, and total supply limits—determining the monetary policy of a cryptocurrency from launch through maturity.
Technical Explanation
Emission schedules are coded into protocol rules. Common patterns include fixed rewards with periodic halvings (Bitcoin), smooth emission curves, or tail emissions that continue indefinitely at low rates. The schedule determines inflation rate, distribution fairness, and long-term supply.
Well-designed schedules balance miner incentives with scarcity. Too fast creates inflation; too slow discourages early participation. The curve shapes ecosystem development—high early emission bootstraps security, while tapering creates value preservation.
SynX Relevance
SynX features a carefully designed emission schedule with a 777 million coin hard cap. Block rewards follow a fair distribution curve that incentivizes early adoption while ensuring long-term scarcity. The emission supports sustainable network security through staking rewards.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is SynX's total supply?
- 777 million SYNX is the permanent hard cap—no more will ever be created.
- Does SynX have halvings?
- The emission curve naturally decreases over time following the designed schedule.
- Why does emission schedule matter?
- It determines token economics, inflation rates, and long-term value potential.
Transparent, predictable monetary policy. Explore SynX