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Just realized it's been 15 years since bitcoin pizza day—May 22, 2010. That's when Laszlo Hanyecz casually posted he'd pay 10,000 BTC for a couple of pizzas. Someone actually took him up on it. Two Papa John's pizzas got delivered, and honestly, that moment changed everything.
Here's what gets me about this story. At the time, those 10,000 bitcoins were worth about $41. Literally forty-one dollars. Today? We're looking at something like $745 million if we do the math at current prices. But the number isn't really the point.
What Hanyecz did was prove Bitcoin could actually function as currency. Before bitcoin pizza day, it was mostly theory—something cryptographers talked about, hobbyists mined in their spare time. But when real pizzas got delivered for real Bitcoin? That's when it became undeniably real. Hanyecz himself said in an interview that the transaction made Bitcoin feel legitimate to him in a way nothing else had.
The wild part is he kept going. Over that summer, Hanyecz spent more than 79,000 BTC on pizzas and other stuff. People love to joke about how much that would be worth now, but they're missing the point entirely. Without those early transactions proving the use case actually worked, Bitcoin might have stayed a niche experiment forever.
Fast forward to today and bitcoin pizza day has become this cultural thing in crypto. May 22 rolls around and you get meetups, pizza parties, educational events happening globally. It's become a reminder of how far we've come. Just this week, Steak 'n Shake started accepting Bitcoin through Lightning Network. What felt experimental back in 2010 is becoming normal commerce.
The current Bitcoin price has hit new highs around $126K, which makes that original pizza transaction look even more surreal in hindsight. But that's kind of the beauty of it—Hanyecz wasn't trying to make a financial statement. He just wanted pizza. He didn't know his casual transaction would become this defining moment in crypto history.
Bitcoin pizza day reminds us that sometimes the most important moments aren't the ones people plan. They're the ones where someone just tries something, and it actually works. Fifteen years later, we're still building on that first bite.