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Why Pi Might Be the Real Continuation of Bitcoin’s Promise


Let’s talk about something that started as a joke, but might not be one.

A cartoon was posted by the official Bitcoin Twitter account. It showed a man with curly hair, glasses, and a thick beard. Just a meme, right?

But next to it, someone placed a real photo. A man with the same curly hair, same glasses, same beard. That man is Dr. Nicolas Kokkalis, the founder of Pi Network.

Now, we’re not saying the cartoon was meant to be him. But the resemblance is hard to ignore. And when you look closer, the symbolism gets even stranger.

SATOCIN → NICOLAS?

Here’s where it gets weird. Some people refer to Bitcoin’s founder, Satoshi Nakamoto, using the stylized name “SATOCIN.” (Satoshi N) Flip that name around and you get “NICOLAS.”


Coincidence? Maybe. But it’s the kind of coincidence that makes you stop scrolling and start thinking.

Because while Bitcoin started the revolution, it didn’t finish it. Its original mission was to create a decentralized currency for real people. But over time, it became more of a speculative asset, traded, hoarded, and mined by machines. The everyday user was left behind.

Pi Picks Up Where Bitcoin Left Off

Pi Network isn’t just launching a coin. It’s building the infrastructure Bitcoin never had. Verified users through KYC. A no-code App Studio. .pi Domains for decentralized apps. A native wallet. An ad network. All of it designed to support real people building real things.

This isn’t theory. It’s already working. Tens of millions of verified users are onboard. They’re testing apps, creating tokens, and shaping the ecosystem. That’s not hype, it’s traction.

So when we see a cartoon that looks like Nicolas, maybe it’s more than a meme. Maybe it’s a quiet nod to the idea that the mission didn’t die, it just changed hands.

Final Thought: The Legacy Lives On

Bitcoin cracked the door open. Pi is walking through it, with infrastructure, identity, and purpose. And whether Satocin was meant to echo Nicolas or not, the resemblance reminds us that revolutions don’t always end. Sometimes, they evolve.

And sometimes, the next chapter looks a lot like the first, just with better tools and real people behind it.

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