Qubic Sets April 1 Start Date For Dogecoin Attack

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Qubic says it will begin its Dogecoin push on April 1, marking the next phase of a mining strategy that first drew attention through its campaign against Monero. The big question is whether Qubic can turn Dogecoin mining into a live demonstration of its broader thesis: that external proof-of-work can be absorbed into a decentralized compute network and used to strengthen Qubic’s own token economics.

In a series of posts over the weekend, Qubic framed the rollout as both a product launch and a stress test. “Every Dogecoin share mined through the Qubic network gets validated by Oracle Machines: independent computors spread across the network who each verify the share separately. Up to 13 oracle commits per transaction. If the result passes the quorum’s Byzantine fault tolerance threshold (agreement from 451 of 676 computors), it’s validated on-chain.”

Qubic To Launch Dogecoin Mining Offensive On April 1

The team added that Oracle Machines went live on mainnet on February 11 and described Dogecoin mining as “the first real-world external use case built on top of this system.” Those claims line up with Qubic’s March technical updates, which said Dogecoin mining is on track for an April 1 mainnet launch and positioned it as a real-world stress test for the network’s outsourced-computing stack.

April 1, 2026 #DogeMeetsQubic pic.twitter.com/dZ3pYibOs7

— Qubic (@_Qubic_) March 22, 2026

Dogecoin ASICs will be able to mine Qubic and receive higher rewards, while mined DOGE will be sold to buy QUBIC on the open market. Part of that purchased supply, it said, would be recycled into mining incentives, while “the rest will be burned,” with the explicit goal of making QUBIC deflationary. Qubic’s official Dogecoin mining explainer similarly says the community is still finalizing how mining revenue will be split between ASIC miners, computors, and broader network incentives.

That makes the April 1 launch more than a simple mining integration. Qubic has been arguing for months that Dogecoin changes its operating model because ASIC-based Scrypt mining can run in parallel with the network’s CPU- and GPU-based AI training, rather than alternating between workloads as it previously did with Monero.

“ASIC miners handle Dogecoin. CPUs and GPUs continue training Aigarth. Both contribute to the network. Neither displaces the other,” Qubic wrote in its March 3 explainer. “The same validation framework can serve price feeds, cross-chain data, and any external information that smart contracts need to act on.”

The backdrop is Qubic’s much more controversial Monero campaign. In August 2025, the project published a post titled “Qubic Performs 51% Monero Network Takeover Demonstration,” claiming it had reached majority hashrate and reorganized the chain. But that version did not hold up cleanly under later scrutiny.

Later independent analyses placed Qubic’s effective share closer to 28% to 35%. Even Sergey Ivancheglo ultimately conceded the operation “should be rebranded into ‘34% attack,’” a nod to the fact that the maneuver looked more like selfish mining than outright majority control.

Dogecoin was not a sudden pivot. By mid-August 2025, after the Monero episode, Qubic’s community had already chosen Dogecoin as its next target for “the following mining season,” with Ivancheglo indicating the transition would take months of development. Qubic’s January and March 2026 updates show that timeline now converging on launch: planning began in January, testing advanced through March, and the dispatcher is already live for test tasks.

At press time, DOGE traded at $0.09.

Dogecoin price chart
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