Uncut Mazacoin Updated -
As of May 2026, the market for uncut Mazacoin sheets has seen a surprising renaissance. While the digital blockchain is largely inactive (the last block was verified in 2019 via a community backup node), the physical notes have entered the realm of "ephemeral crypto-artifacts."
Here is the updated price guide based on recent eBay Heritage auctions and Native American Art Market sales (Q1/Q2 2026):
| Item | Condition | 2020 Value | 2026 Updated Value | % Change | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Uncut Mini-Sheet (4 notes) | Crisp Uncirculated (CU) | $15 | $45 - $60 | +300% | | Uncut Half-Sheet (12 notes) | CU (Original sleeve) | $50 | $180 - $220 | +360% | | Uncut Full Sheet (36 notes) | CU (Archival) | $200 | $750 - $1,200 | +500% | | Error Sheet (Misscut/Misprint) | Varies | $100 | $400+ | +300% | uncut mazacoin updated
Why the spike in 2026?
Uncut fact: Mazacoin’s blockchain launched, blocks were mined, and wallets existed. But from day one, critics called it a “vanity coin” — a clone of Litecoin with a rebranded logo and no economic infrastructure. As of May 2026, the market for uncut
The tribal government? Never officially endorsed it. Then-Tribal President Bryan Brewer distanced himself, saying the tribe had not adopted Mazacoin as legal tender. Without tribal sovereignty backing, the coin lost its unique selling point overnight.
To understand the "uncut" phenomenon, one must first understand the coin itself. Mazacoin was launched in early 2014 by Payu Harris, a member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe (Sicangu Lakota). The premise was revolutionary: create a decentralized digital currency specifically designed to bypass the federal banking system and serve the economic needs of Native American reservations. However, the physical collectibles survived
The Key Differentiators (2014-2016):
However, the physical collectibles survived.
The "Updated" experience on Uncut brings several specific technical and user-facing improvements to the MazaCoin ecosystem: