Clore 2025: Year in Review

Clore 2025: Year in Review

Clore 2025: Year in Review

A year ago, Clore was already moving fast — but 2025 wasn’t about “moving fast.” It was about leveling up the entire system.


Clore 2025: Year in Review

A year ago, Clore was already moving fast — but 2025 wasn’t about “moving fast.”
It was about leveling up the entire system.

No comfortable autopilot. No hiding behind announcements. Just relentless shipping: product upgrades, marketplace mechanics, reliability work, security hardening, real partnerships, real conferences, and the boldest blockchain-level changes we’ve ever made.

And the numbers tell the story: in 2025, Clore executed over 1.5 million orders and delivered 40M+ hours of compute across the world — roughly 4,500 years of continuous compute time. That isn’t just a milestone for our team. It’s proof that a community-driven compute marketplace is not a theory — it’s alive , scaling, and getting stronger.

To everyone who has been part of this journey — renters, hosts, developers, partners, moderators, and the people who quietly supported us from the sidelines — thank you. Every rig connected, every job launched, every bug report, every message in chat, every late-night stress test — you didn’t just use Clore. You helped shape it.

This is Clore’s 2025 — month by month.


January — A faster marketplace

We started the year with a major marketplace upgrade: Gigaspot became a super-fast auction platform , designed to ensure rigs generate the highest possible income for hosts. This shift replaced the classic spot market model and strengthened the marketplace’s ability to find the best price dynamically — improving execution speed, marketplace efficiency, and overall earning potential for providers.


In February, we released a free, fully functional application for all users to manage rentals more seamlessly — bringing essential marketplace workflows into a cleaner, more accessible interface.

The app supported the PoH Marketplace , enabled automatic rig rentals , displayed potential mining earnings for each rented rig , and included Hive OS integration — a critical feature for miners and hosts who live in operational tools every day.


March — Buybacks, fairer commissions and ambassadors

March was a milestone month across both marketplace incentives and token economics.

We continued our buyback strategy by adding 1 million Clore coins to the treasury. We also adjusted the commission structure — moving to an equal split between hosts and users (50/50). The intent was simple: align incentives across both sides of the market and reinforce a healthier long-term marketplace dynamic.

We also launched an ambassador program for bloggers and companies , expanding our growth engine beyond product-led acquisition


April — Referral upgrades designed to reward both growth and usage

In April, we upgraded the referral system with a focus on fairness and scalable growth.

The new commission distribution model worked like this:

  • the host pays half of the commission,
  • the user pays half ,
  • and the user receives the other half back.

Importantly, the total commission amount at the end of the rental remains unchanged — only the distribution changes — improving incentives for both people who bring users into the platform and those who actually rent compute.

We also announced a referral program for ambassadors, offering up to 30% of total commissions , reinforcing community-led expansion.


May — Flexible deposits, compliance clarity, better tooling, and transparency

May was a “trust and clarity” month.

We enabled deposits in any currency , including USDT, BTC, ETH, and more — giving users more flexibility and lowering friction for new participants.

We also published a complete list of banned GPU IDs , ensuring clearer compliance and stronger protections within the network.

On the product side, the template manager was fully updated , improving usability and functionality for real-world deployments.

And we took a transparency step we consider essential: all team wallets became publicly accessible , and we confirmed that no team members had sold their tokens — reinforcing the trust layer that serious infrastructure needs.


June — Community, conferences and staking

In June, we leaned into visibility.

We hosted another AMA , answering every question openly from the community. We also participated as a Gold Sponsor at the SuperAI Conference in Singapore , showcasing Clore’s work on a global stage.

Internally, we fully redesigned the reward distribution system and introduced PoH staking.


July — Industry exposure, multilingual community, and a UI refresh for hosts

July was about expansion and polish.

We formed a collaboration with Cointelegraph , increasing exposure across the broader industry. Our Telegram chat was upgraded to support multiple languages , making community communication smoother across regions.

And we delivered a full overhaul of the MyServers page , giving users a more polished and intuitive experience — especially for hosts managing multiple rigs and configurations.


August — Bare Metal by Clore and stronger security at the account level

August was one of the most important product months of the year: we launched Bare Metal by Clore , giving users direct access to non-virtualized GPU servers with full root control for AI and HPC workloads.

We shipped new base images with modern model stacks — including options like QWQ, Qwen, Gemma, and DBRX — making modern LLM deployment easier out of the box.

We also introduced a beta for the new My Orders layout and strengthened security and governance across the platform with:

  • 2FA ,
  • daily withdrawal limits ,
  • multilingual documentation ,
  • and a large Telegram giveaway to reinforce engagement and community energy.

September — Aethir partnership, Tangem support, and Korea Blockchain Week

September was defined by infrastructure partnerships and international presence.

We announced a strategic partnership with Aethir , combining Bare Metal infrastructure with Aethir’s decentralized GPU network. Bare Metal also expanded to more locations and more enterprise-grade configurations.

We added PoH support for Tangem hardware wallet users through a simple web flow, making participation more accessible for self-custody users.

And we presented Clore at Korea Blockchain Week 2025 in Seoul , expanding awareness in the Asian market and connecting with builders, investors, and partners on the ground.


October — Hive OS integration and UX upgrades

In October, we deepened our ties to mining operations and improved the front door of the product.

Through the Clore x Hive partnership , we integrated with Hive OS , making it easier for miners to connect GPU rigs to Clore’s marketplace. We also ran a major community contest and another AMA.

We shipped meaningful UX upgrades:

  • redesigned login/registration flow,
  • a dedicated support page,
  • richer notifications,
  • higher MFP limits.

November — Reliability wins, longer rentals, and a cleaner operating experience

November was about reliability and power-user workflows.

We shipped a major reliability update including:

  • new Confucius and Acemath models ,
  • refreshed PoH Stake/Rent menus,
  • visible forwarded ports in My Orders ,
  • a quick Lock MFP link ,
  • CMP170HX fixes,
  • and support for longer rentals up to 3,000 hours — an important upgrade for long-running workloads.

We also finalized a complete redesign of My Orders and My Servers , offering a more compact layout, faster bulk editing, and an option to keep the legacy view.

And within Clore Partners, we integrated Cocoon support for Bare Metal — enabling eligible idle rigs to earn additional Telegram Cocoon rewards even when they’re not rented.


December — The biggest tokenomics upgrade in Clore history

We ended the year with the most significant blockchain-level change we’ve ever made: a full tokenomics overhaul.

In December, we:

  • burned 300 million coins , reducing total supply from 1.3B to 1B ,
  • reduced new emission by 60% ,
  • cut team allocation from 10% to 4% ,
  • expanded wallet support to Trust Wallet, Ledger, Trezor , and more,
  • listed Clore on Uniswap ,
  • completed five security audits ,
  • and held another AMA to answer all user questions directly.

This wasn’t just a “numbers update.” It was a structural reset designed to make Clore more sustainable, more transparent, and better aligned with long-term growth.


💥 Closing: 2025 wasn’t a chapter — it was a statement

2025 proved something important:

Clore isn’t a “feature roadmap.”
It’s a living compute ecosystem — shaped by real users, real hosts, real workloads, and a team that keeps rebuilding the core instead of polishing the edges.

We scaled massively — 1.5M+ orders , 40M+ hours delivered , global distribution — but we also did the hard work under the surface: reliability improvements, security upgrades, redesigned flows, partner integrations, better tooling, and the most ambitious tokenomics upgrade we’ve ever shipped.

And none of this exists without the community.

To every renter who trusted Clore with experiments and production workloads.
To every host who powered the network with hardware, uptime, and patience.
To everyone who wrote feedback, reported bugs, joined AMAs, shared posts, and helped newcomers — you are the reason this keeps getting bigger.

We’re not slowing down. We’re not “maintaining.”
We’re leveling up.

If 2025 was the year we rebuilt the foundation, then 2026 is the year we push the ceiling higher than anyone expects.

Stay close. Stay loud. And thank you for building Clore with us. 🧡

2026 is going to be even bigger.

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