A supply schedule is the set of rules that decides how many coins exist now and how many will exist later. In a fair launch the schedule is written into the protocol, published openly, and the same for everyone. There is no discretionary minting, no surprise issuance, and no hidden lever a small group can pull. Malairte (MLRT) follows a fixed, transparent emission curve that anyone can read in the source.
What a supply schedule defines
- Block reward. How many MLRT each newly mined block pays.
- Emission curve. How that reward changes over time, typically tapering or halving at set intervals.
- Maximum supply. The cap, if any, on the total coins that can ever exist.
- Block interval. The target time between blocks, which sets the pace of issuance.
Why transparency is the point
A predictable schedule means no one can quietly inflate the supply to dilute existing holders, and no insider can mint a batch for themselves. Because the rules are public and enforced by every node, changing them would require broad agreement across the network. That is very different from a project where a team controls a mint function and can issue more whenever they choose.
Reading the schedule honestly
When you look at any coin's supply schedule, ask a few grounded questions. Is the emission fixed in code or controlled by a person? Is the current circulating supply consistent with the number of blocks mined and the reward per block? Is there a cap, and is it real? For Malairte, the answers are visible: emission is coded, issuance matches the mined chain, and the schedule is the same one every node enforces.
Supply and fairness
A transparent schedule is what keeps a fair launch fair over time. The launch sets the honest starting point; the schedule keeps it honest afterward. If a project launched without a premine but then handed itself the ability to mint freely, the early fairness would not mean much. Malairte avoids that by fixing the rules up front.
What this is not
The supply schedule tells you how many coins will exist and when. It says nothing about value, demand, or price, and this site makes no predictions on those. Understanding emission is about understanding the mechanics of the network, not forecasting markets. The how-to section shows you how to read the schedule from the code and confirm circulating supply against the chain.