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When $1 Was a Moonshot: Bitcoin's First 'To the Moon' Meme That Actually Landed
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When $1 Was a Moonshot: Bitcoin's First 'To the Moon' Meme That Actually Landed

Picture this: a simpler time. The year is 2011. Bitcoin is wobbling around $0.92–$0.93 like a drunk trying to walk a straight line, desperately trying to prove it's not just another digital experiment destined for the crypto graveyard. April 13th, 2011. The vibes are tense. Earlier that year, in February, BTC had briefly touched dollar parity — a fleeting glance at legitimacy — before promptly face-planting to $0.80 in March. The naysayers, lurking in their IRC channels like gremlins, were already drafting obituaries. "It's over," they whispered to each other. "Parity was a fluke. We told you so." The Bitcoin experiment, according to these visionaries, had officially flopped. Pack it up, boys.

Then, plot twist. April 14th, 2011 arrived like a protagonist showing up fashionably late to their own funeral. BTC hit $0.99, and then — gasp

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Publishergascope.com
Published
UpdatedApr 16, 2026, 20:52 UTC

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