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Have you ever stopped to think about how many bitcoins Satoshi Nakamoto actually has? The answer is fascinating: around 1.1 million BTC. Considering the current price, we're talking about a potential fortune of over 100 billion dollars. But here’s the most intriguing part — this guy has never touched a single coin.
The name is clearly a pseudonym. Translated into Chinese, "中本聪" sounds like something completely random, with no real meaning. No one knows who he really is, and frankly, that might be intentional.
It all started in 2008. Banks were collapsing, the financial system was crumbling, and people simply no longer trusted anything. It was in this chaos that someone — or a group — calling themselves Satoshi Nakamoto published a revolutionary whitepaper: Bitcoin, a peer-to-peer electronic cash system. The idea was radical: create currency without banks, without governments, just machines doing joint accounting worldwide. No one could alter the records. The rules would be code, not people.
This vision shocked many. For the first time, "trust" had a technical solution. The blockchain was born, and with it, Bitcoin. Everything transparent but immutable. No one in the center controlling anything.
Satoshi mined the first bitcoins — the genesis block — and in the early years, he still fixed code, talked with the community. But then he started to disappear. After 2011, he vanished completely. Leaving no trace. Without revealing age, birthplace, nothing. Even his writing style seemed intentionally masked.
Some believe it was for security reasons. Others think it was part of the design itself — to free the system from any personal control. Whatever the reason, the disappearance reinforced the core principle: no leaders, no center, anyone can participate.
And here’s the strangest detail: how many bitcoins does Satoshi Nakamoto have in his wallet? 1.1 million. And they have never been moved. More than a decade has passed. Nothing. Not a single transfer. Either he lost the private key, or he simply no longer cares about money. Either way, it became a powerful signal — the creator of Bitcoin is not in the game of wealth. He’s more like an invisible observer who left the system behind and moved on.
And do you know what’s curious? After Bitcoin became orphaned, it grew even faster. Developers, miners, individual investors joined in. Prices exploded. The media worldwide kept reporting. It became something no one can ignore.
Today, Bitcoin is much more than a speculative asset. El Salvador and the Central African Republic already recognize it as legal tender. Major companies and institutional funds are holding BTC on their balance sheets as protection against inflation. Even the American financial system had to accept it — the Bitcoin ETF marked the moment traditional finance surrendered.
From a geeky experiment to an essential asset in global markets. It only took a few decades. No country managed to completely stop it. If Satoshi left something truly valuable, it was a philosophy: let the code set the rules, not people. His disappearance was the last line of code — no one becomes the center.