Bitcoin mining has grown up
Kryptoberg simplifies institutional Bitcoin mining with curated ASICs and low-cost hosting, turning complex energy and hardware decisions into one clear setup.
Feb 12, 2025
What started with a few GPUs in garages is now a global, industrial-scale infrastructure game. The 2024 halving cut block rewards to 3.125 BTC, while the network hashrate climbed to roughly 1 zetahash which is about 1,000 exahash per second.
Margins are thinner, competition is sharper and the difference between “good mining” and “bad mining” is no longer hardware alone – it’s everything around it: energy, location, uptime and execution. Most providers responded to this by adding more:
more device models
more tariffs
more locations
more “flexible” configurations
From the outside, that looks like choice. In practice, it’s confusion. For many investors, the real bottleneck is no longer access – it’s decision fatigue.
Kryptoberg takes a different approach:
We simplify mining by offering only the best hardware and only the cheapest, realistic energy locations we can find – instead of 15 devices and 20 random locations.
1. Efficient or Out
The broad picture is clear:
Block reward: 3.125 BTC since the 2024 halving.
Network hashrate: hovering around 1 ZH/s, up more than 700% in five years.
Global industrial power costs: often in the $0.05–0.07/kWh range, with some regions moving higher as energy markets tighten.
Analysts now regularly point out that only miners with state-of-the-art ASICs and low-cost energy can maintain healthy margins after the halving. If your electricity is expensive, or your hardware is old, you are effectively speculating on price rather than running a business.
So the equation in 2025 is simple, but unforgiving:
Modern hardware + cheap energy + reliable hosting = viable mining.
Anything else is a lottery ticket.
2. Where Many Hosting Providers Go Wrong
If you look at typical mining hosting providers in 2025, you often see:
10–20 different ASIC models across multiple generations
A long list of locations with different kWh prices, tax regimes and risk profiles
A menu of add-ons: immersion, demand response, “green” energy, priority support tiers
Pricing pages that look like airline fare tables
For an investor – even a sophisticated one – this raises three problems:
You’re expected to make hardware choices you’re not specialised in.
You’re expected to understand global energy pricing and geopolitical risk in detail.
You carry the downside if you choose wrong.
In a high-competition environment, complexity is not a feature. It’s friction.
The mining industry has more than enough variables you cannot control (price, difficulty, regulation). Adding avoidable complexity on top – like 15 miner options and 20 locations – only increases the chance of error.
3. Curated, Not Crowded
Kryptoberg is built around a simple principle:
Give people fewer, better options – and execute them extremely well.
That means:
We don’t list every miner on the market.
We focus on a small number of modern, efficient ASICs that are relevant for leading assets such as Bitcoin, Litecoin and Dogecoin. For example, S21-class Bitcoin miners with around 234 TH/s at ~15 J/TH, instead of aging hardware with 2–3x worse efficiency.
We don’t scatter miners across 20 random jurisdictions.
We select a limited set of locations where:
industrial power can realistically sit in the €0.06–0.09/kWh range all-in,
infrastructure is stable,
and contracts are enforceable.
We don’t push you to optimise micro-choices.
You decide:
which asset you want to mine (BTC or LTC/DOGE),
how much capital you want to allocate (full machine or fractional),
and we design a setup that simply makes sense.
No catalogue browsing. No pretending that twenty device options and dozens of country flags are “freedom”.
4. Hosting as an Edge. Not a Checkbox
In 2025, “hosting” isn’t just rack space and a power feed. It’s the difference between a machine that pays off and one that doesn’t. A serious hosting setup must address:
Energy price and transparency
Global analyses show power costs for industrial mining have roughly doubled in some regions since 2024. Fixed, realistic kWh pricing – not marketing promises – are key. Kryptoberg’s offers are built around that logic, not around headline numbers nobody can sustain.
Location stability and uptime
Difficulty keeps rising, and hashprice has recently hit record lows, squeezing inefficient operations. When your margins are thin, downtime is catastrophic. Our locations are chosen for grid stability and operational resilience, not just theoretical cheap power.
Deployment speed
In a volatile market, waiting 4–8 weeks for your miners to go online is simply lost opportunity. Our edge is that we measure activation in days, not weeks, once contract and payment are confirmed.
Reporting and payouts
Hosting without clear reporting is just trust-me-as-a-service. Kryptoberg focuses on:
performance reporting,
cost visibility,
and quarterly Bitcoin payouts directly to your wallet for BTC setups.
5. How it Looks Like in Practice
Instead of a menu with 15 miners and 20 locations, a Kryptoberg client typically sees something like:
Step 1 – Choose your asset
Bitcoin (BTC) with SHA-256 ASICs
Litecoin + Dogecoin (LTC/DOGE) with Scrypt ASICs
Step 2 – Choose your exposure
Full miner (you own 100% of the device)
Fractional ownership from roughly €350, with proportional payouts
Step 3 – Receive a concrete plan
We provide:
the specific model we recommend (e.g. S21-class),
the hosting location with its kWh rate,
a projected ROI table based on current network data,
and a clear service contract.
Step 4 – Deploy in days
Once signed and paid, your miner is installed, tested and hashing within a short, predefined time window – not whenever capacity happens to free up.
From the client’s perspective, mining becomes:
a clear, finite decision,
backed by a physical asset and a contract,
with known cost parameters and transparent output,
instead of an open-ended negotiation with twenty variables.
6. Why This Model Appeals to Serious Investors
Sophisticated investors – family offices, entrepreneurs, high-net-worth individuals – usually don’t want to become mining experts. They care about:
Capital allocation: how much to commit, over what horizon
Risk profile: where the main sensitivities lie (price, power, hardware)
Operational trust: who runs the infrastructure and how
Cashflow: when and how they get paid
What they don’t want:
To compare 14 types of immersion cooling.
To choose between ten almost identical ASICs.
To study country risk for twenty locations just to get started.
By reducing the surface area of decisions, Kryptoberg makes mining an understandable, manageable piece of an overall portfolio.
You don’t need to learn the entire mining industry.
You need one good, explainable setup that fits your risk and capital.
That’s the gap we aim to fill.
7. Fewer, Better Partners
As more halvings arrive and hashrate continues to climb, the mining industry will consolidate further:
inefficient miners will exit,
overcomplicated hosters will lose trust,
and professional investors will gravitate to partners who
are transparent about costs,
selective about hardware and locations,
and capable of executing quickly.
Kryptoberg is built on exactly that thesis:
We simplify mining: you choose the asset and the capital size, we handle the rest.
We curate, not collect: only top-tier ASICs and realistic, low-cost hosting locations.
We favour clarity over variety: fewer options, better outcomes.
We pay you in Bitcoin: quarterly, directly to your wallet for BTC setups.
In a world where everyone else is trying to look big by listing more devices and more flags, our edge is simple:
We do less – so we can do it properly.
