Tool · Earnings Estimator

RollerCoin Calculator: Estimate Your Mining Earnings

Plug in your hash power and the network rate to see a realistic daily, weekly and monthly estimate — and finally understand the simple math behind every RollerCoin payout.

🧮 Free estimator ⚡ Hash-share model 📊 Daily → monthly
RollerCoin gameplay dashboard showing miners, hash power and live coin stats POWER ÷ NETWORK = SLICE

RollerCoin earnings feel mysterious until you see the one formula running underneath everything: your share of a coin's rewards equals your hash power divided by the total network hash power. Multiply that share by the value of rewards being handed out, and you have your income. This calculator does exactly that — turn the dials and watch the estimate move.

Your inputs

Total power across all your miners. 1 Th/s = 1,000 Gh/s.
The game's total power for that coin. Check the live figure in-game.
Illustrative total USD value distributed to all miners per day.
Seasonal boosts, Season Pass perks, etc.

Estimated rewards

Your network share
Per hour
Per day
Per week
Per month (30d)
Daily in BTC

Estimate only. Real payouts shift constantly with network power, coin prices and event bonuses. Not financial advice.

How the mining math actually works

There's no magic — just proportional sharing. Imagine the whole RollerCoin network as one big pie of rewards baked every block. Your slice is decided by how much hash power you bring relative to everyone else:

The formula: your_reward = (your_power ÷ total_network_power) × rewards_distributed. Double your power and you roughly double your slice — unless the network grows too, which it constantly does.

This is why veterans obsess over power efficiency rather than raw power. As millions of players add miners, the total network power climbs, so a fixed amount of your power earns a little less over time. Staying ahead means compounding — reinvesting rewards into more power faster than the network dilutes you.

Understanding each input

InputWhat it meansWhere to find it
Your hash powerThe combined Gh/s of every miner you own, plus bonusesYour in-game mining dashboard
Network hash powerTotal power competing for that coin's rewardsShown live in-game per coin
Reward pool valueApprox. USD value of all rewards paid out dailyEstimate from coin reward + price
Coin priceConverts your USD estimate back into crypto unitsAny market tracker
Bonus upliftTemporary boosts from events or the Season PassYour active event perks

Turning the estimate into a strategy

A calculator is only useful if it changes what you do. Three takeaways every F2P player should act on:

  1. Chase power-per-cost, not headline power. Before buying a miner, divide its Gh/s by its price (in RLT or cash). The best ratio wins — flashy “big” miners are often worse value.
  2. Reinvest early and often. Because the network keeps growing, power you add today compounds longer than power you add next month. Front-load your upgrades.
  3. Time your withdrawals. Let small balances build so network fees don't eat your payout. The calculator's monthly view helps you see when a coin will clear its minimum.
Reality check: if an input gives you a number that looks too good to be true, it is. Use conservative figures. The biggest mistake new players make is plugging in a tiny network power and dreaming on the output. Always pull the live network figure from the game.

A worked example, start to finish

Numbers click when you see them in motion. Say you've built 500 Gh/s of power, the network is running at 3 Eh/s (that's 3,000,000,000 Gh/s), and roughly $40,000 of rewards are distributed daily across all miners:

  1. Find your share: 500 ÷ 3,000,000,000 = 0.0000001667, or about 0.0000167% of the network.
  2. Apply it to the pool: 0.0000001667 × $40,000 ≈ $0.0067 per day.
  3. Scale it out: that's roughly $0.047/week and $0.20/month at this size — modest, but real, and growing as you reinvest.
  4. Now 10× your power to 5,000 Gh/s and the daily figure jumps to about $0.067 — the linear payoff of compounding, assuming the network holds steady.

This is exactly why early players feel “stuck” — at tiny power levels the numbers are tiny. The calculator's value is showing you the slope: how each upgrade moves the needle, so you can decide what's worth it.

Comparing miner efficiency the right way

The single most profitable habit in RollerCoin is buying on power-per-cost, not raw power. Two miners can have wildly different value:

Miner (example)PowerCostPower per unit costVerdict
Flashy “big” rig1,000 Gh/s500 RLT2.0 Gh/s per RLTWorse value
Mid-tier workhorse600 Gh/s200 RLT3.0 Gh/s per RLTBetter value
Budget unit120 Gh/s50 RLT2.4 Gh/s per RLTDecent early

Illustrative figures only — always check live in-game prices. The lesson holds: do the division before you buy.

When does buying power make sense?

This calculator is also a reality check on spending. Before you buy hash power with real money, estimate two things: how much extra daily reward that power adds, and how long it would take to “earn back” the cost at current rates. In a growing network, pure break-even on hardware is rarely guaranteed — so spend only if you value the faster progress as entertainment, not as a guaranteed investment.

Never spend money you'd miss. RollerCoin is fun and it pays, but it is not a savings account. The F2P path carries zero financial risk; the moment you deposit, normal crypto risk applies. Set a hard budget or stay free.

Which coin should you mine?

RollerCoin lets you direct power toward different coins, and your choice affects how quickly you can actually withdraw:

  • Low-minimum coins (e.g. DOGE): easiest to reach the withdrawal threshold, so you'll see your first real payout fastest — great for motivation.
  • BTC: the prestige pick, but the minimum is harder to hit, so balances build slowly. Best for patient long-haul players.
  • Stablecoins (e.g. USDT): shield you from price swings, useful if you dislike volatility on your small balance.

A common F2P approach: mine a low-minimum coin first to prove payouts to yourself, then redirect power toward whichever coin you actually want to hold long-term.

Want a faster win?

Boost Your Crypto Rewards

Crunching numbers is fun, but sometimes you just want the thrill of a surprise drop. A Mystery Box is a quick, gamified shot at a crypto prize.

🎁 Get Rewards

Sponsored link. 18+. Crypto rewards involve risk — only play with what you can afford to lose.

How to pull accurate live numbers

Your estimate is only as good as your inputs, and the one people get wrong most is network hash power. Guessing it low makes the output look dreamy and useless. Here's how to ground every field in reality:

  • Your hash power: read the total directly from your mining dashboard. Include any active bonus power from events, the Season Pass, or your referral network — it all counts toward your share.
  • Network hash power: the game shows a live total for each coin. Use that exact figure, and remember it climbs over time as players add miners. Re-check it weekly.
  • Reward pool value: approximate it from the coin's per-period reward multiplied by its current market price. When in doubt, estimate conservatively — a low guess that you beat is better than a high one that disappoints.
  • Coin price: any reputable market tracker works. For a quick sanity check, the exact price matters less than keeping it in a realistic range.
Re-run it monthly. Because the network grows, the same power earns a little less over time. A monthly re-calculation tells you whether your reinvestment is outpacing dilution — the single most important signal for an F2P player.

A realistic compounding timeline

To set expectations, here's how a disciplined free player's power might grow purely by reinvesting rewards and claiming daily bonuses — no deposits. Treat the shape, not the exact figures, as the takeaway:

StageApprox. powerWhat's happening
Week 1Starter (~50–200 Gh/s)Tutorial miner + first daily bonuses. Earnings feel invisible — normal.
Month 1~500–1,000 Gh/sFirst efficient miner bought with grinded RLT. Momentum begins.
Month 3A few Th/sCompounding visible; first low-minimum coin nears withdrawal.
Month 6+Several Th/sSteady passive trickle; first real withdrawal realistic for patient F2P.

Highly variable — depends on how aggressively you reinvest, network growth and event luck. The point: meaningful F2P progress is a months-long grind, not a weekend.

Calculator FAQ

How does the RollerCoin calculator work?

It estimates your share of block rewards as your hash power divided by the total network hash power, then multiplies by the value of rewards distributed. It's an estimate, not a guarantee.

Why do my real earnings differ from the estimate?

Because network hash power, coin prices and event bonuses change constantly. The calculator gives a snapshot based on the numbers you enter — treat it as a planning tool, not a promise.

Is this the official RollerCoin calculator?

No. This is an independent estimation tool built by RollerHub to help you understand the mining math. Always confirm live figures inside the official game.

What numbers should I enter?

Use your real in-game hash power and the live network power shown for the coin you're mining. Keep the reward-pool value conservative for a realistic estimate.

Mining-math terms, in plain English

If any term in this calculator tripped you up, here's the quick translation:

TermPlain meaning
Gh/s, Th/s, Ph/sUnits of hash power, each 1,000× the last. Th/s = 1,000 Gh/s; Ph/s = 1,000 Th/s.
Eh/sExahash per second — 1,000,000,000 Gh/s. The scale at which the whole network operates.
Network shareYour slice of the pie: your power divided by everyone's power.
Reward poolThe total value handed to all miners in a period, split by share.
CompoundingReinvesting rewards into more power, so each upgrade buys the next one faster.
DilutionYour share shrinking as other players add power — why standing still means slowly earning less.

Keep these in mind and the calculator stops being a black box: every figure it shows traces back to one honest fraction — your power over the network's, times what's being paid out.

New to the game? Start with our mining game overview, then secure your account via the sign-up guide.