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Just thinking about this crazy Bitcoin story that still blows my mind 🍕 Back in May 2010, a guy named Laszlo Hanyecz did something that seemed totally normal at the time but turned out to be absolutely insane in retrospect. He spent 10,000 BTC to buy two pizzas. Yeah, you read that right. Ten thousand Bitcoin for a couple of pizzas.
At that moment, it was basically nothing—like $41 worth. Seemed like a fair trade, right? He got his lunch, the pizza place got some digital money they probably converted immediately. Nobody thought twice about it. But fast forward to today, and those two pizzas have become the most expensive meal in human history. With Bitcoin trading around $67K now, we're talking about a transaction worth nearly $670 million. Absolutely wild.
This is why May 22 is basically Bitcoin Pizza Day in the crypto community. It's not just about the pizzas though. What Laszlo Hanyecz actually did was prove something crucial—Bitcoin could actually work as real money for real transactions. Before that, it was mostly just theory and speculation. He made it tangible.
Here's the million-dollar question everyone asks: does he still have any Bitcoin? Nobody really knows. Laszlo has never publicly said whether he hodled, sold early, or lost access to his wallet. The speculation is endless. Maybe he kept some and he's a billionaire now. Maybe he sold when Bitcoin hit $1,000 thinking that was the peak (which would be pretty funny to think about now). Or maybe, like a lot of early miners, he just lost his private keys somewhere and that Bitcoin is gone forever.
The thing is, whether Laszlo still owns BTC or not, his story represents something bigger than just one person's fortune. It was the moment cryptocurrency proved it could bridge from internet oddity to actual commerce. Those pizzas weren't just a transaction—they were a statement that this technology could actually be used for something real.
Looking at where we are now with Bitcoin and the entire digital asset space, it's wild to think it all traces back to someone just wanting to order food and being willing to experiment with new payment methods. That one transaction basically helped build the foundation for a multi-trillion dollar market. Pretty insane when you think about it.