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So I keep seeing people confused about K, M, and B on crypto Twitter and in our community chats. Figured I'd share what these actually mean since it comes up constantly.
Let's start with K. That's thousand - pretty straightforward. When someone says 1k, they mean 1,000. If you're looking at a coin that's trading at 1k sats or talking about earning 1k in a day, that's your baseline. 10k is 10,000, 100k is 100,000. The letter K comes from kilo, so once you remember that it just clicks.
Now M is where things get bigger. 1 million = 1,000,000. Think of it as a thousand thousands stacked together. You'll see this all the time when people talk about market caps or trading volumes. 5M means 5 million, 10M means 10 million. Pretty easy to multiply from there.
Then there's B for billion. 1 billion = 1,000,000,000. That's a thousand millions, which honestly sounds insane when you say it out loud. But once you get comfortable with the progression from 1k to millions to billions, it becomes second nature. You start seeing these numbers everywhere - project valuations, total volumes, liquidity pools.
Honestly, if you're spending any time on crypto platforms, YouTube, doing freelance work, or just scrolling through market data, you need to know these cold. It's not complicated math, but it changes how you read numbers and understand what people are actually talking about. Like if someone's hyping a token that hit 1k holders, that's different from hitting 1M in volume, right?
Once you get this down, you'll catch yourself using these abbreviations naturally too. Way faster than typing out the full numbers every time. Definitely helps when you're making decisions based on actual market data rather than just vibes.