Blockchain Cryptocurrency Basics
Cryptocurrency is the most visible application of blockchain technology. Billions of people have heard the word, but far fewer understand what it actually is, how it works technically, or why it differs fundamentally from traditional money. This topic builds a solid foundation in cryptocurrency — the concepts that power every financial transaction on a blockchain.
What Is Cryptocurrency?
Cryptocurrency is a digital form of money secured by cryptography and recorded on a blockchain. Unlike traditional currency — which central banks print and governments control — cryptocurrency operates on rules written in code. Nobody can inflate its supply beyond the programmed limit, and nobody can stop a valid transaction from being processed.
Real-Life Analogy – Casino Chips
A casino issues chips that represent real money. Inside the casino, chips work as currency. Each chip has a specific value. When leaving, chips convert back to cash. Cryptocurrency works similarly — it represents value on a specific network. Unlike chips, cryptocurrency has no casino to exchange with. Its value comes from what people agree to exchange for it and from the mathematical scarcity built into its code.
Digital Money vs. Cryptocurrency
Many people assume bank account balances and cryptocurrency are both "just digital money." They differ in a fundamental way:
| Property | Bank Balance (Digital Fiat) | Cryptocurrency |
|---|---|---|
| Who controls it? | The bank | The individual holding the private key |
| Can accounts be frozen? | Yes — by the bank or government | No — only the private key holder can move funds |
| Who records transactions? | A central bank database | Thousands of distributed nodes |
| Supply control | Central bank prints more as needed | Programmed rules — cannot change without consensus |
| Who needs permission? | Bank must approve transfers | No permission needed — valid transactions always go through |
Coins vs. Tokens – An Important Distinction
Two terms describe blockchain-based digital assets: coins and tokens. Most beginners use them interchangeably, but they are fundamentally different.
Coins
A coin is the native currency of a blockchain network. It powers the network itself — paying for transaction fees and rewarding validators. Each blockchain has exactly one native coin.
| Blockchain | Native Coin | Used For |
|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin | BTC | Value transfer, store of value |
| Ethereum | ETH | Gas fees, staking, DeFi |
| Solana | SOL | Transaction fees, staking |
| Binance Smart Chain | BNB | Transaction fees, ecosystem |
Tokens
A token is a digital asset created by a smart contract running on top of an existing blockchain. Tokens use the host blockchain's coin for gas fees but have their own value and purpose.
TOKEN vs COIN DIAGRAM
Bitcoin Blockchain
+------------------+
| Native Coin: BTC| <-- This IS the Bitcoin blockchain's currency
+------------------+
Ethereum Blockchain
+------------------+
Native Coin: ETH <-- Ethereum's own currency
Smart Contract A --> USDC Token (stablecoin)
Smart Contract B --> UNI Token (governance)
Smart Contract C --> LINK Token (oracle)
Smart Contract D --> SHIB Token (memecoin)
+------------------+
All these tokens are BUILT ON Ethereum, not coins of Ethereum
They pay gas fees in ETH, but have their own market values
Types of Cryptocurrency Tokens
| Token Type | Purpose | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Utility Token | Grants access to a service or platform feature | Filecoin (FIL) — pays for storage |
| Governance Token | Gives voting rights over protocol decisions | Uniswap (UNI) — vote on protocol changes |
| Stablecoin | Pegged to a stable asset (usually USD) | USDC, USDT, DAI |
| Security Token | Represents ownership in a real-world asset | Tokenized real estate shares |
| Non-Fungible Token (NFT) | Represents a unique asset (covered in detail later) | CryptoPunks, BAYC |
How a Cryptocurrency Transaction Works
Priya wants to send 0.1 ETH to Raj Step 1: Priya opens her wallet app Step 2: Enters Raj's wallet address (0xRaj123...) Step 3: Enters amount: 0.1 ETH Step 4: Wallet estimates gas fee: 0.002 ETH Step 5: Priya confirms and signs with her private key Result on blockchain: Priya's balance: - 0.1 ETH (sent) - 0.002 ETH (gas) = decrease Raj's balance: + 0.1 ETH = increase Miner's balance: + 0.002 ETH (gas fee earned) This record is now permanent and public on Ethereum No bank approved it. No intermediary took a cut.
Fungibility – What It Means
Fungible means interchangeable. One unit is identical to every other unit of the same kind. A ₹100 note is fungible — exchanging one ₹100 note for another ₹100 note leaves both parties in the exact same financial position.
Most cryptocurrencies are fungible. One Bitcoin equals any other Bitcoin. One USDC equals any other USDC. NFTs are the opposite — each token is unique and non-interchangeable (covered in a later topic).
Stablecoins – Crypto Without Volatility
The price of Bitcoin and Ethereum fluctuates wildly. A stablecoin solves this by pegging its value to a stable asset — usually the US Dollar. Stablecoins let users participate in DeFi and crypto transactions without exposure to price swings.
| Stablecoin Type | How It Maintains Peg | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Fiat-Backed | Real USD in a bank for every token issued | USDC, USDT |
| Crypto-Backed | Overcollateralized with crypto (e.g., 150% ETH backing) | DAI |
| Algorithmic | Algorithm expands/contracts supply to maintain peg | FRAX (partly algorithmic) |
Market Capitalization
The market capitalization of a cryptocurrency is the total value of all coins in circulation:
Market Cap = Current Price × Total Circulating Supply Bitcoin Example: Price: $60,000 per BTC Circulating Supply: 19,700,000 BTC Market Cap: $60,000 × 19,700,000 = $1.182 Trillion
Market cap is a more meaningful measure of a cryptocurrency's size than price alone. A coin priced at $1 with 1 trillion supply has a larger market cap than a coin priced at $1,000 with 1 million supply.
How New Cryptocurrency Enters Circulation
- Mining Rewards (PoW) – New coins created when miners add valid blocks
- Staking Rewards (PoS) – New coins issued to validators who propose blocks
- ICO / Token Sale – Project creates and sells tokens to early investors
- Airdrops – Free token distribution to existing wallet holders
- Pre-Mine – A portion of total supply created before public launch
Summary
- Cryptocurrency is digital money secured by cryptography and recorded on a blockchain
- Coins are native to a blockchain; tokens are built on top via smart contracts
- Transaction types include utility, governance, stablecoin, security, and NFT tokens
- Cryptocurrency transactions are permissionless, peer-to-peer, and irreversible
- Stablecoins solve price volatility by pegging value to stable assets like the US Dollar
- Market cap measures total network value better than price alone
