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I've noticed that many people have been talking about Pi Network lately, especially around the symbolic target of $314,159 per Pi. It has become almost a meme in the community, but let’s see if it’s really realistic.
For those who don’t know, Pi Network was created in 2019 by former Stanford students with an interesting idea: a crypto that anyone can mine from their phone. No need for expensive hardware like Bitcoin. They use the Stellar Consensus Protocol instead of traditional proof of work, making mining much more accessible.
But here’s the thing. Pi is still in the closed mainnet phase. It’s not really tradable on major exchanges yet. Once that happens and people can actually buy and sell, that’s when things will get interesting.
Now, that figure of $314,159... okay, it’s mathematically cute, but let’s be honest. If Pi really reaches that price, its market capitalization would surpass hundreds of trillions of dollars. We’re talking about exceeding Bitcoin and literally the entire global economy. That’s just not possible.
The number one problem is supply. Millions of people have mined Pi for free, so there’s a huge amount in circulation. When trading begins, you’ll see a wave of massive sell-offs from people wanting to realize their gains. That will completely crush any hope of price surges to extreme levels.
Let’s compare with Bitcoin. The most valuable crypto took over ten years to reach its peak near $70,000. And Bitcoin has a limited supply of 21 million, plus strong institutional adoption. Pi doesn’t have any of these features.
What could really help Pi is if companies and institutions start actually using it. If you can pay for something with Pi, or if it’s integrated into serious DeFi apps, then yes, the value could increase. But even in that scenario, reaching the level of $314,159 remains a dream.
A more realistic price? Between $1 and $100 seems more probable based on market conditions and actual adoption. That’s already a nice gain for early miners, without having to wait for the impossible.
The key takeaway: Pi Network has potential, but focusing on that $314,159 target is a distraction. What really matters is whether the ecosystem will truly take off and find real-world utility. That’s where serious gains will come from. No need for mathematical fantasy.