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Just witnessed something pretty wild - Bitcoin Pizza Day just hit its most poetic milestone yet. We're talking a new all-time high of $111,800 back in May 2025, right on the 15-year anniversary of the transaction that started it all.
So here's the thing that still blows my mind: back in 2010, a developer named Laszlo Hanyecz decided to actually use Bitcoin for something real. He dropped 10,000 BTC for two Papa John's pizzas. At the time, those coins were worth maybe $40. Literally pocket change. But May 22, 2010 became the first recorded commercial Bitcoin transaction - the moment when internet money stopped being theoretical and became actual currency.
Fast forward to today and those same 10,000 BTC? We're looking at over $700 billion in value. The guy could buy 70 million pizzas at current prices. When people talk about Bitcoin Pizza Day, they're not just commemorating a transaction - they're marking the exact moment Bitcoin proved it could function as real money.
What's interesting is that Hanyecz himself has never seemed bothered by the whole "missed fortune" angle. He's said the transaction made Bitcoin feel real to him, and honestly, that perspective tracks. He was mining back when BTC was basically worthless. Nobody could have predicted we'd get here.
But here's what really matters about Bitcoin Pizza Day beyond the nostalgia: it showed the world that this actually works. Now you've got people buying property with Bitcoin, paying for cars, and in some places, even settling taxes with it. From two pizzas to mainstream adoption - that's the arc Bitcoin Pizza Day represents. The transaction went from being a novelty to a cultural milestone that fundamentally changed how we think about digital currency.