Tony Yazbeck, founder of The Bitcoin Way, shares how losing access to his bank accounts in Lebanon led him to Bitcoin – and to building a global education platform focused on real-world use, not paper products or financial shortcuts.
From plain-English teaching and hands-on guidance to advocating Bitcoin as money, Tony explains why education, culture, and everyday adoption matter more than ETFs or custodial promises.
'It’s a whole movement,' says creator Marek Safarik – a YouTube riddle hunt now ends January 17 with real Bitcoin prizes
Somewhere inside a YouTube video, a single word is hidden. That word unlocks part of a phrase. That phrase opens a gate. And beyond that gate is real Bitcoin. Across different countries, strangers are pausing videos, replaying scenes, decoding riddles, and quietly comparing notes. There are no loud leaderboards or glossy launch campaigns – just a growing trail of clues, a focused community, and a final prize that cannot be printed, promised, or gamified. Only earned. Behind it is Marek Safarik and a project he refuses to call just a game. “Okay, so The Game of Satoshi is basically… it’s a whole movement. I will not say it’s a game,” he told Guardians of Bitcoin. What he has created is a story-driven Bitcoin challenge that blends puzzle solving, real-world action, and economic education – with season one now entering its final days. A story built on mystery The idea did not begin with a platform or a marketing funnel. It began with a question. “I was like, ‘Okay, which story is the most interesting to hear in the Bitcoin space?’” Safarik said. “Of course, Satoshi – and nobody knows [who he is]. So I can create whatever I want, because it’s just my imagination.” From that starting point came a serialized experience that now plays out across YouTube. Season one launched in October and concludes this month, with its final riddle dropping on January 17. Rather than presenting itself as a traditional course, The Game of Satoshi unfolds as a long-form scavenger hunt. “It’s a YouTube series – 12 episodes and 12 missions,” Safarik explained. “In those videos, there are hidden clues what you need to decipher to win in Bitcoin in the end.” The first half of the series explores how money becomes money, moving through historical failures such as debasement and gold confiscation before transitioning into practical Bitcoin lessons. “Now there was a confiscation of the gold – that was one topic of the video. And then there is a Bitcoin lesson: how to do self custody.” Each episode also includes an action-based mission. These require players to interact directly with wallets, self-custody practices, and real Bitcoin tools – reinforcing the idea that learning is something you do, not something you passively consume. Participation is free, and players can join at any point. Only those who have gathered the required clues can enter the elimination phase – a final round that determines who competes for the prize. “In the elimination phase, there will be some tasks you need to accomplish,” Safarik said. “And then there will be final riddle on 17th January and people will have the opportunity to compete for one Bitcoin.”
A guaranteed Bitcoin prize From the outset, The Game of Satoshi is built around a guaranteed Bitcoin prize rather than a symbolic reward. “The one Bitcoin is split between the players who will finish everything,” Safarik said. “One Bitcoin is guaranteed.” The ambition, however, goes beyond that baseline. Safarik designed the game so that donations and sponsorship can expand the prize pool as the season progresses, allowing the final reward to grow organically alongside the community. Anyone can now contribute directly to the prize pool through Geyser Fund, allowing the total reward to grow organically as the season progresses. “All the donation what is coming is going directly to the pool.” Built by someone who never fit the labels As the final riddle approaches, The Game of Satoshi continues to grow quietly. Safarik has built the format to evolve, but he is also clear about the challenges that come with expanding it beyond the screen. Physical, location-based riddles introduce new complexity – particularly for a community that is globally distributed. For now, the project remains primarily focused on Bitcoiners, who already understand the tools and principles being explored through the missions. Future seasons are expected to broaden that focus, gradually shifting toward participants who are new to Bitcoin, while preserving the same learning-by-doing structure. Safarik’s longer-term plans point toward real-world treasure hunts inspired by Ready Player One, where players move through physical locations to uncover hidden clues. The transition from online to offline formats is not simply a creative step, but a logistical one – balancing accessibility for a global audience with the ambition to create something tangible. The final riddle drops on January 17. What follows will not only determine who completes the first season, but also shape how the next versions of The Game of Satoshi are built.
The Smashtoshi collective has created a book where each page is a new artwork, together forming a visual chronology of Bitcoin’s history.
Each artwork represents a specific moment in Bitcoin’s timeline, turning the book into both a cultural record and a work of art.
The first edition – a high-quality leather version – was auctioned in Abu Dhabi, while the remaining copies are strictly limited, designed as coffee table books and long-term collectibles.
In The Crypto Radio Live today December 30th with Lara Sabri:
> Meta to buy China’s Manus to power advanced AI features > Alt5 Sigma faces delisting risk after missing filings, hiring unlicensed auditor > Blockchain gaming investment drops 55 percent as Web2.5 games rise > Flow chooses recovery over rollback after $3.9 million exploit > Shiba Inu launches NFT system to repay users after 2025 hack > El Salvador makes Bitcoin education mandatory for all students > Experts debate whether the dollar’s dominance is ending > Bitcoin celebrates 15 years since its 100,000th block was mined
🚨UPDATE: Sberbank initiated Russia's first loan backed by crypto collateral to major Bitcoin miner Intelion Data.
⚪The pilot deal's size, tenor, and collateral details were not revealed ⚪The crypto assets are confined through Sberbank’s in-house Rutoken solution until repayment
The Crypto Radio
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Russia's largest Bank, Sberbank, plans to initiate crypto-backed loans
⚪ Can give ruble lending tightened by digital assets ⚪ Deputy Chairman Anatoly Popov:
The bank is willing to work with regulators for the infrastructure Hopes to formally discuss such transactions in the future
Russia’s top exchanges are eyeing regulated crypto trading by 2026, while Sberbank explores crypto-backed loans. Not a free-for-all – but a clear move toward controlled crypto integration.
Despite a crypto ban, Bitcoin mining is booming in Libya, fueled by cheap electricity and weak enforcement. A clear case where bans fail – and mining finds a way.
Bitcoin glitches, extreme fear, and $30B riding on options,
The market feels heavy, sentiment is stuck in fear, $ETH ETFs are bleeding, and even a flash crash scared everyone for a second… yet beneath the noise, something very different might be forming. From $BTC 's end-of-year pressure to $UNI 's massive token burn and why rate cuts didn’t save crypto (yet), today’s update connects the dots most people miss.
Mu’aawiyah Tucker, Bitcoin educator, approaches Bitcoin as a system meant to be used as it is, not reshaped to fit market cycles or institutional narratives.
“Just vanilla Bitcoin… Bitcoin as it is.”
He examines Bitcoin through practical and ethical frameworks, including Islamic legal principles around money, debt, and fairness. He is skeptical of balance-sheet thinking and treasury-focused narratives, arguing that they do little to explain whether Bitcoin is actually being used in ways that matter.
“Fiat is issued through debt and interest. Bitcoin is issued through work.”
🚨President Vladimir Putin said Russia is in talks with the United States about managing the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, with the U.S. expressing interest in utilizing the plant's electricity for Bitcoin mining.
Zaporizhzhia is Europe’s largest nuclear power plant.