WhitePaper EN
  • WhitePaper DeflationCoin
  • 1. Introduction
  • 1.0. Preface
  • 1.1. The Socio-Economic Consequences of Inflation
  • 1.2. The process of exporting inflation from the U.S. to other countries
  • 1.3. A Global Bankrupt Disguised as a "Financial Leader"
  • 1.4. The Birth of the Crypto Industry
  • 1.5. Bitcoin’s Limitations
  • 1.6. A Cryptocurrency Without the Flaws of "Digital Gold"
  • 2. Mission and Objectives
    • 2.0. Mission and Objectives
  • 3. Operating and design principles
    • 3.0. Preface
    • 3.1. Limited Supply with Zero Inflation
    • 3.2. Daily Smart-Burning of Coins
    • 3.3. Deflationary Halving—Unlike Bitcoin.
    • 3.4. Smart-Staking
    • 3.5. Smart Dividends
    • 3.6. Gradual Unlocking
    • 3.7. Basket and Pump (BaP)
    • 3.8. Attention Capture Mechanism
    • 3.9. Blockchain-Integrated Affiliate Marketing
  • 3.10. Smart Fees
  • 3.11. Deflationary Ecosystem
  • 3.11.1. Educational Gambling
  • 3.11.2. Potential Directions for Scaling the Ecosystem
  • 3.11.3. Legal and Regulatory Aspects of the Ecosystem
  • 3.12. Environmental Principle
  • 3.13. Geometric Progression in Coin Distribution
  • 3.14. Automated Diversification Across Exchanges
  • 3.15. Online Node
  • 3.16. Open Source Blockchain and Financial Transparency of the Ecosystem
  • 3.17. Three-Level Decision-Making Mechanism: "Proof-of-Deflation"
  • 3.17.1. Meritocracy of Ideas
  • 3.17.2. Skin in the game
  • 3.17.3. The Right to Veto
  • 3.18. The principle of “Humor and Memes”
  • 4. Team
    • 4.0. Preface
    • 4.1. Natoshi Sakamoto
  • 4.2. Vitalik But Not-Buterin
  • 4.3. DeflationCoin Mafia
  • 5. Tokenomics
    • 5.0. Preface
  • 5.1. Token Distribution
  • 5.2. The 50% | 50% Expenditure Principle
  • 6. Blockchain architecture level
    • Minus 1 level (-L1)
  • 7. Technical Architecture
    • 7.0. Technical Architecture
    • 7.1. Reliability and Security Architecture
    • 7.2. Cryptographic Security Methods
    • 7.3. Conceptual Architecture of DeflationCoin
    • 7.3.1. Smart Contract Architecture
  • 7.3.2. Online Node
  • 7.3.3. Deflationary Ecosystem
  • 7.3.4. Automated Order Placement on DEX
  • 7.4. Development and Transition to a Proprietary Innovative Blockchain.
  • 8. asset rating
    • 8.0. Asset Rating
  • 8.1. Detailed analysis of indicators
  • 9. Conclusion
    • 9. Conclusion
  • 10. Reference
    • 10. Reference
  • 11. Contact Information
    • 11. Contact Information
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  • Coin unlocking after the completion of Smart-Staking occurs daily and is calculated using the following formula:
  • Formula Parameters:
  1. 3. Operating and design principles

3.6. Gradual Unlocking

The price of any asset is determined by the actions of one decisive and highly motivated participant, not by the consensus of many. If such a participant can emerge only among buyers, not sellers, the asset’s price will inevitably rise.

The “Gradual Unlocking” mechanism is a key element in DeflationCoin's pricing model. By gradually releasing coins from Smart-Staking, strong selling pressure is eliminated, while strong buying potential is maintained.


Coin unlocking after the completion of Smart-Staking occurs daily and is calculated using the following formula:

U(d)=Q+DQ(y)∗30U_{(d)} = \frac{Q + D}{Q_{(y)} * 30}U(d)​=Q(y)​∗30Q+D​

Formula Parameters:

  • U(d)U_{(d)}U(d)​ - Number of coins unlocked per day.

  • Q - Total number of coins in Smart-Staking at the start of the unlocking period.

  • D - Accumulated unpaid dividends over the staking period.

  • Q(y)Q_{(y)}Q(y)​ - Number of years the coins were locked in Smart-Staking.


Bitcoin has repeatedly experienced price declines of over 80%, making it difficult to position it as a reliable storing value. At any moment, investors may face significant capital losses.

Sudden price drops on cryptocurrency exchanges often occur in a domino effect:

  1. A stop-loss order from one participant triggers a price drop.

  2. This activates stop-loss orders from others, causing a chain reaction.

  3. High leverage amplifies this process: liquidations of highly leveraged positions lead to further sales, accelerating the asset's collapse.

  4. Panic among some participants provokes panic among others, resulting in substantial price declines.

The “Gradual Unlocking” mechanism minimizes the risk of mass sell-offs, reducing the influence of human factors and negative emotions. As a result, DeflationCoin is a more reliable storing value compared to Bitcoin, which has repeatedly suffered severe price crashes.


Ignoring the risks of low-probability events is unacceptable solely because of their low likelihood.

Such events can have a significant impact on systems, companies, markets, and even entire economies. Without proper protection against them, any risk management becomes merely an illusion of control. It is precisely low-probability risks that can lead to the most severe consequences, and neglecting them means lacking real control over risks as a whole.

In the case of Bitcoin, the risk of a sudden price drop: such as during the COVID-19 pandemic when major holders sold en masse and the price declined by more than 50%. With the “Gradual Unlocking” mechanism, such scenarios are effectively prevented in DeflationCoin.

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Last updated 7 hours ago