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There's something wild about Satoshi Nakamoto's net worth that most people don't fully appreciate. The mysterious creator of Bitcoin is sitting on a fortune that would make them one of the richest people alive — we're talking somewhere north of $80 billion in theoretical wealth — yet they've never touched a single coin or revealed who they actually are.
Think about that for a second. Around 1.1 million BTC, all mined in Bitcoin's earliest days when you could run the entire network on a few laptops. That stash has just been sitting there, completely untouched since 2010. Fifteen years. Nothing moved.
With Bitcoin trading around $73K recently, Satoshi's holdings put their net worth in the same ballpark as some of the world's biggest names. We're talking Michael Dell, Rob Walton from Walmart, people in that tier. Getting close to Steve Ballmer and Warren Buffett territory. The only person clearly ahead is probably someone like Sergey Brin from Google.
What makes this even crazier is how they got there. No venture funding rounds, no IPO, no building a traditional company. Just dropped the Bitcoin whitepaper, let the network run, and disappeared. Sixteen years later and you've accidentally created a multi-trillion dollar ecosystem.
The thing is, Satoshi Nakamoto's net worth is completely theoretical. None of it's been liquidated. Nobody even knows if those coins are still accessible or if they're lost forever. Some people think Nakamoto is dead. Others think they're just committed to never touching the project. Either way, the fact that this fortune exists untouched tells you something about how far cryptocurrency has actually come since 2011.
It's the kind of story that makes you wonder what would happen if Satoshi ever decided to move even a fraction of it. But that's probably the point — the best thing they did for Bitcoin was create it and then disappear.