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You know that story about the world's most expensive pizza? Yeah, I've been thinking about it lately, especially with Bitcoin hitting new highs again.
So back in May 2010, this programmer named Laszlo Hanyecz did something that would literally become a turning point in crypto history. He posted on BitcoinTalk asking if anyone would sell him two Papa John's pizzas for 10,000 Bitcoin. At the time, Bitcoin was basically worthless—trading at around $0.003 per coin. Nobody really believed in it yet. It was just some weird tech experiment, right?
Two days later, someone actually took the deal. Laszlo got his pizzas, and the rest became legend. The thing is, he had zero regrets about it. In interviews, he said something like "I didn't know Bitcoin would become this big. To me, it was just amazing that I could actually use cryptocurrency to buy something real." That mindset is actually pretty interesting when you think about how early adopters approached this technology.
Now here's where it gets wild. Those 10,000 Bitcoin that bought him two pizzas? In 2017, that amount was worth around $200 million. And today, with Bitcoin trading at $67.27K, we're looking at a value that's absolutely staggering. This is probably the most expensive pizza ever purchased, no question.
The whole story reveals something deeper about how crypto evolved. It started as people experimenting with peer-to-peer transactions, just trying to prove the concept worked. Laszlo's pizza purchase was one of those early real-world tests. But what makes this story stick around is that it perfectly captures the volatility and potential of this space. Small decisions back then turned into massive outcomes later.
Every May 22nd, the crypto community celebrates "Bitcoin Pizza Day" now. It's become this symbol of where Bitcoin came from and how far it's come. When you see Bitcoin and other major assets like ETH ($2.04K, up 1.89%) and XRP ($1.35, up 1.19%) moving the way they do today, it's worth remembering that this whole ecosystem started with someone just wanting to buy pizza with digital money.
That most expensive pizza taught us something important: sometimes the biggest opportunities look small at first. The real lesson isn't about regretting past decisions—it's about recognizing what actually matters when you're early on something new. Laszlo got his pizzas and became part of crypto history. Not a bad trade, honestly.