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You know that story about the most expensive pizza in the world? Yeah, the Bitcoin Pizza Day thing. I was thinking about it recently and realized how wild this whole saga actually is when you look at the numbers today.
So back in May 2010, this programmer named Laszlo Hanyecz was just casually using Bitcoin for actual transactions when literally nobody thought it had any real value. We're talking $0.003 per coin at that point. He posted on BitcoinTalk asking if anyone would trade him two large Papa John's pizzas for 10,000 BTC. Someone actually took the deal.
Here's where it gets insane. At the time, those 10,000 bitcoins were worth like $30. Thirty bucks for pizza. Fast forward to 2017 and suddenly that same amount was worth $200 million. But if you check today's prices? We're looking at nearly $800 million for the most expensive pizza in the world. It's actually mind-blowing when you think about the opportunity cost.
What I find most interesting is that Laszlo apparently has zero regrets about it. In interviews, he's mentioned being amazed that he could use cryptocurrency to buy something tangible at all. That was the whole point back then—proving the technology could work for real purchases, not just sitting in wallets.
This whole thing is basically a time capsule of how far crypto has come. Back then, the most expensive pizza in the world would have seemed like a joke to anyone watching. Now it's become this legendary moment that people celebrate every May 22nd. The crypto community literally turned it into a holiday.
The real lesson here isn't about the money Laszlo "lost." It's that early Bitcoin adoption was about proving utility first, profit later. Those were the days when using Bitcoin for actual commerce was revolutionary. Now we've got institutional investors, corporate treasuries, and entire financial ecosystems built around it.
So yeah, think about that next time you're grabbing pizza. Somewhere out there exists the most expensive pizza in the world, and it fundamentally changed how we think about digital currency.