Today’s Community Picks highlights posts, projects, ideas, and reader comments from around the BSV community that remain worth attention. Some are new, some are continuing threads, and some are earlier signals that still help explain where builders and community voices are focused.
Gaming & Consumer Apps
Blocktris turns mempool activity into a Tetris-style visualization
Blocktris offers a playful way to view activity waiting to enter the next BSV Blockchain block.
Each transaction is represented as a Tetris-style piece, with its shape determined by the project’s protocol. An automated player organizes the pieces with a speed and precision that would be impossible for a human player. When a new BSV block is found, the completed lines are cleared.
The current version is better understood as a live visualization than as a conventional game. A future version may add human play.
That distinction does not reduce the idea’s value. Network activity can be difficult to explain through transaction counts and technical dashboards alone. Turning transactions into moving pieces gives people a more immediate picture of the mempool, block formation, and the continuous flow of activity across the network.
Micropayment Games
Terapong connects individual game events with one-satoshi transactions
Terapong explores what a game can look like when very small transactions are attached directly to individual events.
The demonstration presents contacts with paddles, walls, and shields as triggers for one-satoshi BSV transactions. Instead of limiting transactions to deposits, purchases, or final rewards, the experiment brings them into the moment-to-moment activity of the game itself.
A game event initiating a transaction is not the same as final blockchain confirmation, and the project remains a small creative demonstration rather than a documented production game economy.
Even so, the idea is useful. When transaction costs are low enough, payments do not need to sit outside an application as a separate checkout step. They can become part of the application’s internal behavior—connected with actions, access, rewards, data, or machine responses.
Terapong makes that possibility visible through a familiar and simple game format.
Update — June 15, 2026

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