🚗 #GateSquareCommunityChallenge# Round 2 — Which coin is not listed on Gate Launchpad❓
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🗓️ Deadline: October 8, 2025, 24:00 (UTC+8)
The true mystery of Satoshi Nakamoto not moving Bitcoin.
The biggest mystery in the world of crypto assets. Satoshi Nakamoto, that mysterious figure, the father of Bitcoin.
It's already 2025, and no one knows who he is. He disappeared in 2011. Vanished without a trace.
Why leave? Tired? Afraid of legal troubles? Maybe dead? Caught? Or do you think Bitcoin can fly by itself now?
But the strangest thing is this: he never even touched that pile of Bitcoin.
This wallet is one of the earliest mining results, containing approximately 1.1 million Bitcoin. At the price in September 2025 (around $129,000 per coin), its total value reaches up to $129 billion. This easily places him among the top of the global rich list. Yet, he remains completely still.
Some say that Satoshi Nakamoto deliberately regarded these Bitcoins as "dead assets" and destroyed the private keys. After all, the total supply of Bitcoin is 21 million coins, and his share accounts for 5%. If sold, the market would go crazy.
This risk, to be honest, is one of the biggest sources of FUD for Bitcoin.
Many people believe that Satoshi Nakamoto not using his own Bitcoin might be the biggest gift he gave to the project.
Some people think that maybe he just accidentally lost the private key or device. Lost it.
But there is another theory that seems more plausible: he is conducting the most ruthless public test in history.
The Ultimate Test of Bitcoin Security
Anyone can see how many coins are in that wallet. They just lie there openly on the public ledger, worth billions of dollars.
Hackers all over the world are trying hard to crack that password and invade that wallet.
It's like the greatest treasure in history, just sitting there. As long as you find a small loophole in the Bitcoin blockchain, you can take it.
In this situation, Bitcoin faces its most severe test. A moment of life and death.
As long as that wallet is safe, Bitcoin has hope. If it gets hacked and Bitcoin is transferred or sold, it proves that there is a major problem with the system, and the entire project could collapse.
The temptation of money is always the greatest. Hackers have certainly tried various means, but they have all failed. This in some way proves that the Bitcoin network is truly secure.
So, why do you think Satoshi Nakamoto has never moved his Bitcoins?