Here’s what makes most crypto investors nervous: projects that promise revolutionary tech but deliver nothing. But this time, something different happened, Spacecoin successfully launched three satellites into orbit on November 20, marking one of the most significant real-world achievements ever executed by a Web3 company.
Now picture something different: three Spacecoin satellites successfully lifting off aboard a Falcon 9 rocket at Vandenberg Space Force Base on November 20. Over a year of engineering, millions in capital, and partnerships culminated in 90 seconds of controlled chaos as 1.7 million pounds of thrust pushed hardware into orbit and the mission succeeded.
These aren’t mockups or test renders. They’re real satellites. Satellites that cost real money to design, manufacture, test, and launch. While blockchain projects debate tokenomics and announce surface-level partnerships, Spacecoin
Where others announce strategic partnerships, Spacecoin signed actual contracts and launched satellites into orbit.
The company proved viability in October 2025,
Spacecoin’s successful November 20 launch now scales this effort. The three satellites will test inter-satellite communication, mesh networking, and throughput capacity needed to serve the 3 billion people without affordable internet access. Spacecoin has now entered the phase where it will validate functional satellite internet infrastructure in real time or fail publicly. No middle ground exists in orbital mechanics.
The $33 Billion Market Blockchain Companies Theorize About
While giants compete for wealthy consumers, Spacecoin spotted what everyone else missed: 3 billion people in developing markets with zero affordable access. Not charity, untapped market share in a $33.44 billion industry growing faster than almost any other sector.
Spacecoin is also preparing to launch its Open Protocol, which will open-source both its satellite and protocol designs. This approach allows governments, telecoms, and private operators to launch compatible satellites and participate freely. By distributing infrastructure across multiple operators, the network aims to reduce connectivity costs to just a few dollars per user per month in initial key markets such as Nigeria, Indonesia, and India. Centralized networks cannot achieve this level of affordability because they need to recover billions in capital.
Spacecoin has already invested millions in researching, developing, and launching its first round of blockchain-enabled satellites, and will invest millions more as the constellation size grows. This is infrastructure spending, not software development. Hardware does not iterate with git commits and continuous deployment pipelines.
The Infrastructure Play Crypto Companies Miss
Countless Web3 startups claim they’ll change the world, but only a handful ever take the leap to actually do it. While Bitcoin set out to bank the unbanked, Spacecoin’s mission is to bring internet access to the places the world still hasn’t reached.
Satellite coverage ignores geography. A constellation in low Earth orbit covers continents without terrestrial infrastructure. The business model shifts from direct consumer sales to wholesale capacity. Telecom operators, governments, NGOs, educational institutions buy connectivity and resell locally. A government connects rural hospitals and schools. A mobile carrier extends coverage where towers fail economically. An NGO enables distance learning in refugee camps.
Spacecoin targets
Two totally different plays for two totally different markets.
The Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Network model enables this. Ground station operators, bandwidth providers, and network participants earn tokens for contributing capacity. Users build verifiable digital identities through network access, creating financial inclusion in regions where traditional banking systems remain inaccessible.
The technical validation matters. CTC-0 remains operational, trackable via
The Team That Chose Hardware Over Hype
Founder Tae Oh built
General Wesley Clark, retired four-star U.S. Army general and former Supreme Allied Commander Europe of NATO, advises on strategy. Decades of managing global infrastructure security and large-scale deployment operations translate directly to satellite constellation logistics. Don’t mistake this for a celebrity advisory role. It’s the kind of hands-on experience that comes from years of leading real-world operations, now being applied to build and scale Spacecoin across jurisdictions.
Moreover, over the years, Tae and his team have poured their time, energy & personal savings into bringing Spacecoin to life. What began as an idea has evolved into a hands-on mission filled with late nights, trial runs, and moments of doubt that turned into breakthroughs. Every satellite they launch and every system they refine carries a piece of that effort. Their journey is still unfolding, driven by the same belief that real change takes persistence, patience, and heart.
Why Hardware Accountability Changes Everything
Blockchain thrives on iteration. Deploy, test, fix, redeploy. Software allows mistakes. Hardware doesn't. Satellites cannot be patched after launch. A failed component ends the mission. Launch failures destroy millions in seconds. No git commits fix orbital mechanics.
The satellites launched running the Spacecoin protocol will either work or become debris. Ground stations either connect or don't. The binary nature of hardware forces accountability software projects never face. The
Spacecoin spent millions on engineering, manufacturing, and SpaceX bookings. The company will spend millions more reaching operational scale. This separates infrastructure from marketing.
Now that the launch has succeeded, the answers are beginning to emerge. Spacecoin’s satellites will either establish mesh networking and validate the model in the coming weeks, or any failures will force reevaluation. Unlike whitepapers, hardware provides clear results and the first major step, the launch itself, has already succeeded.
The question was never whether blockchain works in space?
Multiple projects proved that. The real question is whether crypto companies will keep hitching rides on others’ hardware or start building their own.
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