This Pizza Bought 10,000 BTC… And Everyone’s Still Chasing the Dough

Remember that joke about the first crypto transaction? Yeah, it involved a baker, a million‑dollar kitchen, and a pizza that cost 10,000 BTC in May 2010.

Laszlo Hanyecz, the original crypto prankster, got two slices of Papa John’s for 10,000 Bitcoin coins. Back then those coins were worth about four pennies each, so the pizza cost like the price of a cup of coffee and a parking meter ticket combined.

Fast forward to today, and that pizza is worth roughly 771 million dollars. Apparently, the only thing worse than rating a pizza as “average” is calculating how many punks of Bitcoin are now sitting on a dough‑crusted slice.

Hanyecz didn’t just crunch numbers; he invented the first MacOS Bitcoin client and discovered GPU mining like a nerdy kid with a crystal ball.

HOT Stories
Beeple Drops Wild 2140 Michael Saylor Art
Hyperliquid (HYPE) Nears All‑Time High, Shiba Inu (SHIB) Faces Strong Downside Volume, Toncoin (TON) Returns to $2: Crypto Market Review

Happy Bitcoin Pizza Day! 🍕🟡

Binance (@binance) May 22, 2026

When those speakers at the conference heard that a half‑delicious pizza could land you a small fortune, they realized that laptop‑vpn‑tethered money isn’t just a theory for late‑night stand‑upists. It’s a reality that made pizza an acceptable medium of exchange-especially when Bitcoin was still a last‑minute after‑thought pesto sauce.

Now you can pay for a home, a car, or a fancy piece of jewelry with Bitcoin. It’s the ultimate “just add money” life hack.

Hanyecz shrugged, saying the pizza made Bitcoin “real” to him. Who are we to question a man who once thought his coin stash had more value than a stake in a pizza joint? The rest of us can just assume those 10,000 coins were like a year’s worth of pizza deals.

Bitcoin history

At the time of writing, Bitcoin’s price is about 77,153 dollars per coin, shortly after surpassing a record 126,198 last October. Yesterday’s pizza-now a trillion‑dollar asset-reminds us that early crypto enthusiasts were basically having their own culinary revolutions.

Back on May 22, 2010, Bitcoin was playing hopscotch at $0.004 per coin. Sixteen years later, that same basil‑typhoon of a slice would be worth more than everyone’s mortgage.

The story began in the vault of a mysterious inventor named Satoshi Nakamoto. On August 18, 2008, the domain bitcoin.org was registered. A month later, his paper titled “Bitcoin: A Peer‑to‑Peer Electronic Cash System” was posted on a cryptography mailing list.

On January 3, 2009, the Bitcoin network finally launched when Satoshi mined block zero with a reward of 50 bitcoins. That block was like the opening night of the world’s most enduring rock opera-just with more gotchas and fewer guitar solos.

Read More

2026-05-22 14:56