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You know that story about the world's most expensive pizza ever? It's not some luxury item sold at auction, but rather a transaction that fundamentally changed how we think about cryptocurrency. Let me take you back to May 22, 2010.
Laszlo Hanyecz, a programmer based in Florida, did something that seemed completely ordinary at the time but turned out to be historic. He was one of the early believers in Bitcoin when most people dismissed it as just a technical experiment with zero real-world utility. Back then, Bitcoin was trading at around $0.003 - basically worthless in everyone's eyes.
So Laszlo decided to test if Bitcoin could actually be used for real transactions. He posted on BitcoinTalk asking if anyone would sell him two large pizzas for 10,000 BTC. Two days later, someone took him up on it and ordered him a Papa John's pizza. Boom - first real-world Bitcoin purchase completed.
Here's where it gets wild. At that moment in 2010, those 10,000 bitcoins were worth roughly $30. Laszlo basically paid $30 for pizza. Seems reasonable, right? But fast forward to 2017 and that same amount would have been worth $200 million. Today in 2026, those 10,000 BTC are worth approximately $692 million. Yes, you read that right. The world's most expensive pizza in history.
What's fascinating is that Laszlo never expressed regret about it. In interviews, he said he was just amazed that cryptocurrency could actually work for buying something tangible. He understood the historical significance even if he couldn't predict the price explosion.
This pizza purchase taught us something important about early adoption and long-term thinking. Bitcoin started as this fringe idea that nobody believed in, and it took people like Laszlo actually using it for real transactions to prove it had genuine utility. Small decisions in emerging technologies can have exponential consequences.
Every May 22nd, the crypto community celebrates Bitcoin Pizza Day as a reminder of where we came from. It's not just about the money - it's about how far we've come from 'Bitcoin is worthless' to a trillion-dollar asset class. Pretty wild when you think about it.