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#GateSquarePizzaDay
May 22, 2010. In Florida, a programmer left a shy post on a forum:
"Anyone willing to buy two pizzas for 10,000 BTC?"
No one applauded. No one realized history was being written. Only a delivery man knocked, boxes were opened, and cheese stretched. Laszlo Hanyecz thought he had satisfied his hunger; in truth, he was offering humanity the first taste that it was possible to buy something real with digital money.
Neil Armstrong, stepping onto the moon in 1969, said, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." Laszlo's step was like that. A small step, because it was just two pizzas. A giant leap, because with that first bite, "value" proved it could breathe far from vaults, banks, and governments.
Today, sixteen years later...
But the story didn't end with the price.
When Laszlo bought the pizza, Bitcoin was just an idea. Today, that idea has seeped through walls, knowing no borders. The total market capitalization of tokenized real-world assets has surpassed $65 billion. It was $45 billion at the beginning of the year—growing by roughly forty-four percent—and Ethereum holds about a third of that pie.
Look how far we’ve come, haven’t we?
From two pieces of dough bought with a coin nobody knew, we’ve now arrived at a place where, as echoed in Gate Square’s #GateSquarePizzaDay topics, we’re dividing BlackRock’s treasury bonds, a share of an apartment building in Europe, a solar farm in Africa, all on the blockchain. The #RWAMarketCapExceeds65Billion tag isn’t empty boasting; it’s the legacy of that pizza, growing slowly and steadily.
Laszlo was called crazy because he could spend. But that was the real courage. Holding was easy, spending required faith. Today, we’ve learned to hold, and now we’re learning to spend again, to use, to make it tangible in real life. RWA is the proof of this. Bitcoin, which we bought to store value, is now becoming the very rails we lay to transport that value.
I am not buying pizza. I don’t open the box to smell it. I just listen to the echo of that first bite.
Because history is sometimes not written on large white sheets of paper. Sometimes history begins with a bite, inside a cardboard box, that should be eaten while still warm.
And that bite became the first yeast of a $65 billion ecosystem today.
May 22, 2010. In Florida, a programmer left a shy post on a forum:
"Anyone willing to buy two pizzas for 10,000 BTC?"
No one applauded. No one realized history was being written. Only a delivery man knocked, boxes were opened, and cheese stretched. Laszlo Hanyecz thought he had satisfied his hunger; in truth, he was offering humanity the first taste that it was possible to buy something real with digital money.
Neil Armstrong, stepping onto the moon in 1969, said, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." Laszlo's step was like that. A small step, because it was just two pizzas. A giant leap, because with that first bite, "value" proved it could breathe far from vaults, banks, and governments.
Today, sixteen years later...
But the story didn't end with the price.
When Laszlo bought the pizza, Bitcoin was just an idea. Today, that idea has seeped through walls, knowing no borders. The total market capitalization of tokenized real-world assets has surpassed $65 billion. It was $45 billion at the beginning of the year—growing by roughly forty-four percent—and Ethereum holds about a third of that pie.
Look how far we’ve come, haven’t we?
From two pieces of dough bought with a coin nobody knew, we’ve now arrived at a place where, as echoed in Gate Square’s #GateSquarePizzaDay topics, we’re dividing BlackRock’s treasury bonds, a share of an apartment building in Europe, a solar farm in Africa, all on the blockchain. The #RWAMarketCapExceeds65Billion tag isn’t empty boasting; it’s the legacy of that pizza, growing slowly and steadily.
Laszlo was called crazy because he could spend. But that was the real courage. Holding was easy, spending required faith. Today, we’ve learned to hold, and now we’re learning to spend again, to use, to make it tangible in real life. RWA is the proof of this. Bitcoin, which we bought to store value, is now becoming the very rails we lay to transport that value.
I am not buying pizza. I don’t open the box to smell it. I just listen to the echo of that first bite.
Because history is sometimes not written on large white sheets of paper. Sometimes history begins with a bite, inside a cardboard box, that should be eaten while still warm.
And that bite became the first yeast of a $65 billion ecosystem today.