If Bitcoin ever reaches $200,000… one person could instantly become one of the richest humans on Earth.
You’re probably already thinking of the right person… but let me reveal the name.
His name is Satoshi Nakamoto. The mysterious creator of Bitcoin is believed to control around 1,000,000 BTC, mined during the very early days of the network when almost nobody in the world even knew Bitcoin existed.
At today’s prices that fortune would already be worth tens of billions of dollars. But if Bitcoin ever reached $200,000, those coins would be worth roughly $200 BILLION, placing Satoshi in the same league as the richest people on the planet. Here’s the part that still fascinates the entire crypto world.
Those wallets have been completely untouched for more than 15 years. No transfers. No spending. No movement. A fortune that large exists… yet behaves as if it doesn’t.
And everyone in crypto knows one thing: if those coins ever moved, it would instantly become the biggest story in the history of Bitcoin.
So here’s the real question: What do you think would happen to the market if Satoshi’s Bitcoin suddenly moved one day?👇👀
😳 Early 2025, a man appeared on Pump.fun claiming he had only “120 hours to live” and launched a memecoin called 120 HOURS to leave money for his family.
Crypto Twitter went insane.
People weren’t buying because of utility or tech… they were buying because of the story.
The token exploded from almost nothing to a massive market cap in just days as thousands aped in thinking they were supporting a dying man’s final wish.
Then everything collapsed.
Liquidity started disappearing, wallets moved funds around, and the chart got nuked within hours. Many started realizing the emotional story may have been the real product all along.
That’s the scary part about crypto sometimes: People don’t just buy coins.
They buy hope, emotion and narratives. And some know exactly how to profit from that. 😅
For a moment, the internet completely lost its mind.
People were paying millions of dollars for JPEGs.
One of the most famous examples?
CryptoPunk #5822.
Sold for about $23.7 million.
Just for a pixelated character.
Another NFT called “The Merge” by artist Pak sold for about $91 million, becoming one of the most expensive pieces of digital art ever sold.
Even tweets became NFTs. In 2021, the first tweet ever posted on Twitter was sold as an NFT.
Price?
$2.9 million.
The buyer later tried to sell it again.
The highest bid he received?
About $280.
But the craziest part of the NFT boom wasn’t just the prices.
At its peak, the NFT market was doing billions of dollars in trading volume every single month.
Celebrities launched collections.
Companies rushed to build NFT marketplaces.
People were flipping cartoon images like they were stocks. And then…
Things cooled down.
Trading volumes dropped more than 90% from the peak, and many collections that once sold for hundreds of thousands are now worth only a fraction of that.
But the story of NFTs isn’t just about hype.
It’s also about how quickly markets can explode when a new technology captures people’s imagination.
Which makes you wonder something interesting:
Were NFTs a revolutionary new form of digital ownership… or just one of the biggest internet bubbles ever created? 👇
Some Bitcoin wallets hold over $700,000,000… and haven’t moved a single coin in more than 10 years.
Yes, really.
Right now there are addresses holding 10,000+ BTC.
At today’s prices, that’s well over $700 million sitting in a single wallet.
And some of these wallets have been completely silent for over a decade.
No transfers. No selling. No activity. Just Bitcoin… sitting there.
Think about what that means.
Those coins survived the 2013 crash, the 2018 bear market, the 2020 panic, and every major wave of fear and hype in between.
While millions of people bought and sold trying to time the market, these wallets simply did nothing.
Holding that amount of Bitcoin through multiple cycles requires something most investors struggle with:
Conviction.
Because when the price drops 70%, when the media calls Bitcoin “dead”, and when everyone around you is panic selling… holding suddenly becomes much harder than it sounds.
Which makes you wonder something interesting.
If you owned 10,000 BTC, worth hundreds of millions of dollars…
would you really be able to hold it for 10+ years without touching it?👇
A simple Bitcoin mistake once cost someone $150… today it would be worth over $1,500,000.
Yes, really.
Someone once sent a tiny Bitcoin transaction worth just $0.01, but something went very wrong. Instead of paying a normal network fee, they accidentally paid 29.6 BTC as the transaction fee.
At the time it didn’t seem like the biggest disaster in the world. This happened back in 2013, when Bitcoin was trading at around $5 per coin, so the mistake cost roughly $150. Painful, but not life-changing.
Today those same 29.6 BTC would be worth well over $1,500,000. All for sending a transaction worth one cent.
And here’s the strange part: nobody knows who made the mistake. The wallet that received the fee simply kept the coins.
Because in Bitcoin, once a transaction is confirmed, there’s no undo button. No bank, no customer support, no refunds. Just one expensive lesson permanently recorded on the blockchain.
Which makes you wonder: What do you think is the most expensive mistake someone has ever made with Bitcoin?👇
Now here’s something interesting: If Bitcoin were distributed equally across the planet, each person would get only about 0.0026 $BTC .
There will only ever be 21,000,000 BTC. But the world has more than 8,000,000,000 people. Which means the average person would own less than 0.01 BTC.
And reality is even more extreme.
Millions of BTC are believed to be lost forever.
Large holders control huge portions of the remaining supply. And institutions are quietly accumulating more every week. Which means the amount of Bitcoin actually available may be far smaller than most people realize.
Sometimes the biggest story in Bitcoin isn’t the price. It’s the scarcity.
Alright, let’s do this. How much Bitcoin do you think I actually own? 0.01 BTC 0.1 BTC 1 BTC More?
Drop your guess below. I’ll reveal the answer later.👇
From flipping burgers… to building a $100B crypto empire.
Before becoming one of the most powerful figures in crypto,Changpeng Zhao had a surprisingly ordinary life.
At one point, he even worked at McDonald’s.
Years later, he would create Binance — the largest crypto exchange in the world.
But the story gets even more interesting.
Few people know that: • He moved to Canada as a teenager • His father was once exiled from China • Before crypto, he built high-frequency trading systems • Binance launched in 2017
Then things escalated fast.
At its peak, Binance processed more than: $70,000,000,000 in trading volume every day.
CZ’s estimated net worth once exceeded: $110,000,000,000.
From flipping burgers… to building one of the most powerful companies in crypto.
Sometimes the most ordinary beginnings lead to the most extraordinary outcomes.
Together, these funds are quietly removing Bitcoin from the liquid market.
Most of that BTC moves into long-term institutional portfolios, not active trading. Which means part of the circulating supply slowly disappears from exchanges.
And historically, shifts in who holds the supply have mattered as much as the price itself.
So while many people focus on the daily chart institutions may be making their move in the background.
The real question is: Are you watching the price chart… or the flow of Bitcoin into institutional hands?👇
Can you imagine getting paid 30 BTC per month as a salary?
Take a second and think about it.
Today that would be about $2.3 million. It sounds crazy now.
But something very similar actually happened. Back in 2013, when Bitcoin was trading around $100, a few companies experimented with paying employees in BTC. At the time it didn’t feel extraordinary. Bitcoin was still a strange internet experiment and very few people believed it could become what it is today.
A normal monthly salary of around $3,000 could easily be paid in roughly 30 BTC. Back then it was just another paycheck. Today those same 30 BTC would be worth more than $2 million.
And this is one of the strange things about Bitcoin’s early years. Some people really did receive payments and salaries in BTC. But very few managed to keep those coins. Most sold them long before the real explosion happened.
Because in crypto, the hardest part has never been buying Bitcoin. It has always been holding it long enough.
If you’ve been around crypto for a while, you’ve probably heard this more than once. And that’s what many people are saying right now.
Every time the price drops hard, the same headlines start appearing: Bitcoin is finished, the experiment failed, this time it’s really over. But when you look at the data, something interesting shows up.
Since Bitcoin was created in 2009, journalists and analysts have declared it “dead” more than 400 times. Yes hahahahaha, more than four hundred obituaries for Bitcoin.
It happened after the huge crash in 2013, again during the 2018 bear market, and once more in 2022, when Bitcoin fell from around $69,000 to nearly $16,000.
Each time the arguments sounded convincing. A lot of people genuinely believed that this was the end. And yet something curious kept happening. After every crash, after every obituary, Bitcoin eventually recovered… and later reached new highs.
So it raises a simple question. If Bitcoin has already “died” more than 400 times, why does it keep coming back? 👇
They say they would hold through any crash, any panic, any market cycle. But history has shown something very different.
Every time Bitcoin drops hard, fear spreads across the entire market and many investors end up selling. During major crashes, millions of coins suddenly move on the blockchain as people rush to exit their positions.
In March 2020, when Bitcoin crashed almost 50% in a single day, exchanges registered some of the highest selling volumes ever recorded.
Something similar happened during the last bear market. After reaching $69,000, Bitcoin eventually fell to around $16,000, and a large number of long-term holders finally gave up and sold.
Not because they stopped believing in Bitcoin… but because watching your portfolio collapse in real time feels very different from imagining it.
It’s easy to say “I will hold forever” when the market is green. It becomes much harder when the price suddenly crashes overnight.
So let’s be honest. If Bitcoin suddenly dropped 50% tomorrow, what do you think most people would actually do?