If you feel like many of the biggest, most confident voices in Bitcoin seem to come from a different universe…you’re not imagining it.
A large share of the people who shaped this space early were stacking or mining Bitcoin between 2011–2016, when prices ranged from single digits to a few hundred dollars.
In that era:
• Buying 10-50 BTC was realistic for middle-class earners
• Mining from garages and dorm rooms was viable
• A few thousand dollars could (and did) turn into tens of millions
Someone who accumulated 50 BTC at $100 had a $5,000 cost basis. At today’s prices, that’s multi-million-dollar wealth. Some early miners and builders didn’t stop at dozens…they accumulated hundreds or more. Many of the most visible voices today are, understandably, speaking from that position of extreme asymmetry.
That matters for expectations and market sentiment.
If you arrived in 2017 or later like I did, Bitcoin didn’t offer the same math. The market was already larger. Price discovery gave way to adoption. The upside didn’t disappear - it just stretched out in time.
If you came into Bitcoin in the last ~5 years (and you weren’t already wealthy & have the kind of funds to quickly “catch up” by buying in size) then the experience can feel even more lopsided. You’re watching people talk from a position of owning hundreds of bitcoins… while you’re trying to build your stack one disciplined purchase at a time.
The bear markets and downturns can be more difficult to stomach.
But that doesn’t mean you “missed it.”
It just means you’re in a different cohort (and you’re not alone). Most people don’t own ANY bitcoin at all.
Here’s what didn’t change…and this is where the opportunity still lives:
***Bitcoin is still in the early innings of becoming a global monetary asset.***
Today it’s roughly a $2 trillion network competing with:
• $30 trillion in gold
• sovereign bonds as stores of value
• monetary systems that lose purchasing power by design
This is not a short-term trade. This is a multi-decade repricing.
For this cohort, Bitcoin isn’t about waking up rich one cycle.
It’s about:
• making saving work again over a long horizon
• protecting purchasing power in a world of nothing-stops-this-train permanent deficits
• preserving optionality as currencies are debased and systems shift
• owning private property that can’t be confiscated
Early Bitcoiners were rewarded primarily by price discovery.
Later Bitcoiners are rewarded by duration, conviction, and discipline.
Less euphoria, yes.
But more permanence.
Different cohort. Same asset.
And still very early where it actually matters.