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Just thinking about one of the wildest stories in crypto history and how it still hits different even after 16 years.
May 22, 2010 - Laszlo Hanyecz, a programmer in Florida, did something that seemed totally normal at the time but turned out to be absolutely legendary. He posted on BitcoinTalk asking if anyone would sell him two Papa John's pizzas for 10,000 Bitcoin. Someone actually took the deal. And just like that, he became the guy who bought what would eventually be known as the most expensive pizza in the world.
Here's what makes this insane - back then, 10,000 BTC was worth roughly $30. Laszlo was basically spending pocket change in the eyes of most people. Bitcoin was still this weird tech experiment that nobody really believed in. It wasn't even on anyone's radar as a real asset.
But fast forward to today and you start to see the real weight of that decision. If he held those 10,000 coins instead? We're talking about over $300 million in value. That pizza transaction became the most expensive pizza purchase in history, and honestly, it's hard to even wrap your head around it.
What's interesting is that Laszlo actually doesn't regret it. He's said in interviews that at the time, just being able to use cryptocurrency for a real-world transaction felt revolutionary. That was the whole point - proving that Bitcoin could actually work as a medium of exchange, not just sit in wallets as a theoretical asset.
That's why the crypto community still celebrates May 22nd as Bitcoin Pizza Day every year. It's not really about the pizza or the money - it's about that moment when someone took a leap and showed that this technology could actually do something tangible. It was the proof of concept that Bitcoin needed.
Looking at the market right now, BTC is sitting around $67.31K, up 0.77% today. ETH is at $2.06K with a 0.43% gain. XRP is holding at $1.31, down slightly by 0.30%. The prices have obviously moved a lot since 2010, but the lesson from Laszlo's pizza remains the same - sometimes the most important transactions aren't about maximizing profit, they're about believing in what you're building.
If you're curious about Bitcoin's journey or want to track how far we've come since that first real-world purchase, you can check out the charts on Gate. Pretty wild to see it all mapped out.