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You know what's wild? Bitcoin just hit a new all-time high of $126,080, and the timing couldn't be more poetic - it's May 22, Bitcoin Pizza Day.
Fifteen years ago to this day, a developer named Laszlo Hanyecz did something that most people thought was completely insane. He spent 10,000 BTC on two Papa John's pizzas. At the time, that was roughly $40 worth of bitcoin. A casual transaction that would change how people thought about digital money forever.
Here's where it gets interesting. Those same 10,000 BTC? They're now worth over $1.1 billion. Let that sink in for a second. You could buy over 70 million pizzas with that amount today.
What makes this transaction so significant isn't just the absurd wealth multiplication - it's what it represented. This was the first recorded commercial transaction using bitcoin. It was the moment when internet money stopped being theoretical and became real. Hanyecz has talked about this before, mentioning that the transaction made bitcoin feel tangible to him in a way nothing else had. He'd been mining these coins back when BTC was trading for fractions of a penny, and like everyone else, he couldn't have predicted what it would become.
But here's the thing - the May 22 Bitcoin Pizza Day story isn't just about one guy's regret over a massive fortune. It's a cultural milestone. It proved that you could actually use this technology as currency. It showed the world that blockchain wasn't just academic exercise - it worked.
Fast forward to now and bitcoin is being used for way more than pizza. Property transactions, car purchases, and in some countries, even tax payments have been processed in BTC. The infrastructure keeps expanding, adoption keeps accelerating.
So when Bitcoin Pizza Day rolls around and we see new all-time highs hit on the same date? It's hard not to see it as a full-circle moment for the entire ecosystem.