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Just realized something wild about Bitcoin's early days. You ever heard about the guy who bought pizza for 10,000 BTC back in 2010? That's Laszlo Hanyecz, and honestly, his story is the perfect example of how insane crypto's value shift has been.
So picture this: May 22, 2010. Laszlo Hanyecz decides to make history without even knowing it. He trades 10,000 Bitcoin for two pizzas. Sounds crazy now, right? But back then, those coins were literally worth like $41. Just forty-one dollars for 10k BTC. He probably thought he was getting a decent deal.
Here's where it gets absolutely mental. Fast forward to today, and Bitcoin's sitting around $69K. Do the math on what those two pizzas would be worth now. We're talking about $691 billion. Yeah, you read that right. The most expensive pizzas in human history, and Laszlo Hanyecz basically paid for them with pocket change by today's standards.
But here's the thing nobody really knows: does Laszlo still have any Bitcoin left? That's the million-dollar question. Or rather, the billion-dollar question. He's never publicly confirmed whether he kept any of his holdings. Some people in the community think maybe he held onto a portion, which would make him absolutely loaded. Others figure he probably sold when BTC hit $100 or $1,000, thinking it had already mooned. There's also the possibility he just lost access to his wallet like so many early adopters did.
What makes Laszlo Hanyecz's story actually important though isn't just the regret or the what-ifs. His transaction proved something fundamental: Bitcoin could actually work as real money. It wasn't just theory anymore. Someone actually used it to buy something tangible. That moment basically opened the door for everything that came after.
Whether Laszlo still owns Bitcoin or not, his legacy is cemented. Those two pizzas became a symbol of crypto's entire journey from a niche experiment to a trillion-dollar asset class. Every May 22, the community celebrates it as Bitcoin Pizza Day. It's a reminder of how far we've come and how much value can shift in over a decade.