DGB · DigiDollar tracker & vault calculator
Why five mining algorithms? Because attacking DigiByte means controlling 51% of hash power across at least three of the five simultaneously — meaningfully harder than a single-algorithm chain.
DigiDollar hasn't activated on mainnet yet, so there's no live protocol data to show. Once it does, this card will automatically switch to showing:
Each DigiDollar is backed by DGB locked in a vault at a collateral ratio of 200%–500%, chosen by whoever mints it. There's no dollar reserve sitting in a bank — the backing is on-chain DGB, over-collateralized so the peg can absorb DGB price swings without the vault going underwater.
DigiDollar hasn't launched on mainnet yet, so there's no live contract or live funds to audit. Check the official DigiByte channels for the current audit status before mainnet launch, and treat any pre-launch claims of "audited and live" with suspicion — this dashboard will link to a published audit here once one exists.
You do. A vault is opened and owned by the person who locks the DGB into it — there's no company or admin key that can freeze it, seize the collateral, or mint on your behalf. The protocol's rules (collateral ratio, lock period, oracle price) are enforced by code, not by a custodian.
Unlike fiat-backed stablecoins (a company holds dollars and issues tokens against them), DigiDollar is crypto-collateralized and non-custodial — closer in spirit to early DAI than to USDC or USDT. Its main departure from most crypto-collateralized stablecoins is using a fixed lock period instead of price-triggered liquidations, trading collateral illiquidity for no forced-sell cascades during a crash.
An open-source blockchain launched in 2014 with no company, no CEO, and no ICO behind it — just volunteer developers. It's known for fast ~15-second blocks and using five different mining algorithms for security.
A planned stablecoin native to DigiByte. Instead of a company holding dollars in a bank and issuing tokens against them, anyone can lock their own DGB as collateral and mint a dollar-pegged token — no central issuer, no freezing, no company controlling supply.
A vault is your locked DGB. The collateral ratio is how much extra value you lock relative to what you mint — 300% means you lock $300 of DGB to mint $100 of DigiDollars. Higher ratios are safer (less likely to be affected by DGB price swings) but tie up more DGB.
Many stablecoins force-sell your collateral if its value drops too far, which can cascade during market crashes. DigiDollar instead commits your collateral for a fixed period (30 days to 10 years) — no forced liquidations, at the cost of your DGB being illiquid until the lock ends.
An oracle feeds the real-world DGB/USD price on-chain so the protocol knows how many DigiDollars your collateral is worth. DigiDollar uses multiple independent oracle operators reaching consensus together, rather than trusting a single source.
Official downloads and docs: digibyte.org
Developer discussions: GitHub
This dashboard is community-built and donation-supported — see the Wallet & Support tab.