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You ever think about how the creator of Bitcoin's net worth is basically locked in a vault that nobody can touch? Satoshi Nakamoto is sitting on something wild right now. With Bitcoin's price movements over the years, that early mining stash — roughly 1.1 million coins — puts Satoshi's estimated fortune somewhere north of $134 billion. That's the kind of wealth that would make them one of the richest people walking the planet, if they ever decided to actually do something with it.
Here's where it gets interesting. Satoshi's holdings have just... sat there. Since 2010. Not a single transaction. While everyone else in crypto is trading, selling, moving coins around, Satoshi's wallet is like a time capsule. It's this constant reminder that the creator of Bitcoin stepped back from their own creation and never looked back. That was their last public message in 2011. Sixteen years of radio silence.
The mystery is part of what makes this so compelling. Is Satoshi dead? Lost the keys? Deliberately staying away? Nobody knows. But the fact that someone could accidentally become one of the world's richest people just by mining cryptocurrency in their garage during the early days — that says something about how massive this space has become.
What's wild is comparing the creator of Bitcoin's net worth to other billionaires. We're talking about wealth that rivals people like Michael Dell, Rob Walton from Walmart, even getting close to Steve Ballmer and Warren Buffett. Sergey Brin from Google is sitting around $142 billion — Satoshi's right there in that neighborhood. Except Satoshi didn't build a company, didn't pitch to VCs, didn't do any of the traditional billionaire playbook. Just created a protocol and walked away.
Bitcoin has been on quite the journey since then. The recent push higher, driven by ETF flows and institutional money, shows how far we've come from those early mining days. The creator of Bitcoin's original vision has basically spawned a $2.4 trillion ecosystem. Whether that fortune ever moves is probably one of crypto's biggest unanswered questions. And honestly, it probably never will.