In a stunning twist of digital fate, Bitcoin Knots now clutches 19% of active nodes, according to various trackers who probably just rolled the dice and called it a day.
Bitcoin Core Stays Dominant, But Knots’ 19% Spotlights a Widening Rift on Transaction Policy
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Knots, a client with anti-spam tools that let node operators play god with transactions, now holds 19% of the network. Who knew decentralization could look like this?
Still confused? This article is your lifeline.
According to Coin Dance stats on Sept. 9 at 9:30 a.m., Bitcoin Core, the reigning monarch, operates 18,758 nodes (80.77% share), while Bitcoin Knots wrangles 4,417 nodes (19.02%). The remaining 0.19%? Probably just bots arguing about the meaning of life.

The top three clients are Bitcoin Core’s /Satoshi:29.0.0/, /Satoshi:28.1.0/, and the Knots version /Satoshi:28.1.0/Knots:20250305/. This coincides with the release of Bitcoin Core v29.1, which developer Gloria Zhao announced with all the enthusiasm of someone describing tax reform.
On X, the v29.1 launch sparked a social media fiasco. Knots supporters unleashed a barrage of criticism in the thread. “Sorry, we’re ‘not technical enough.’ Running Knots,” BTC supporter Justin Belcher snarked. Tom Dobridge added:
“Given the lack of candor, deflection, obfuscation, and downright insults hurled at anyone objecting to op return expansion, it is safe to say the credibility of core dev is in tatters.”
Zhao’s X post on Sept. 8 was so ignored it might as well have been written in invisible ink, with 20,000 impressions but only 162 likes and 22 reposts. Meanwhile, the Bitcoin Core Project’s X post from Aug. 29 got 94,000 impressions-still not enough to make anyone care.
According to Grok, Zhao’s post drew 72 replies, 67 of which were “not great.” The Bitcoin Core Project’s post got 139 replies, 129 of which were “also not great.” The social media storm and Knots’ rise suggest a broader test of consensus-building-like a group project where everyone hates each other.
Node choice is now a policy referendum on spam controls, with maintainers needing to communicate clearly-or at least pretend to. With social feedback trending critical, the next few releases may just tear the network apart… or not. The OP_RETURN data size limit in Bitcoin Core is set to be removed in v30, scheduled for Oct. 30, 2025. The real plot twist? No one will remember this by then. 🌌
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2025-09-09 18:34