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Recently, I was reflecting on that moment when Bitcoin hit $100k. A milestone that many in the community dreamed of seeing. And as I watched people celebrate on social media, I noticed something curious: everyone was writing "BTC at 100K." So I thought, how many people really know what 100K means in money?
The answer is more interesting than it seems. The K you see in 100K is not random. It represents 1,000 units. So when someone says 100K, they are talking about $100k. Simple, but with a story behind it.
This notation comes from ancient Latin and Greek. The letter kappa was linked to the Greek word khilioi, which means thousand. Merchants and the financial world adopted it because it is clear and economical. On social media, where every character counts, writing 100K instead of 100k not only saves space but creates a much more powerful visual impact.
I think that’s why the milestone of 100K resonated so much. It was not just a technical number. It was emotional. Round. Symbolic. Both for veterans who have followed Bitcoin from the beginning and for newcomers. Seeing that figure on Twitter, Reddit, and forums meant something deeper: it was a statement that Bitcoin had reached a place that seemed impossible years ago.
Now, looking at the current context, Bitcoin has fluctuated since that all-time high. But that doesn’t take away from the fact that the 100K moment marked an important turning point. Many analysts speculated then whether we could see 140K in 2025, and some dreamed of the famous 1M, although that would probably require several more cycles.
What’s clear is that reaching 100K was not just a number. It was the end of one stage and the beginning of another. The question of what 100K means in money was answered: $100k. But the deeper question, what that milestone means for Bitcoin and its future, remains open. And we will probably continue debating the next round numbers that the cryptocurrency reaches. If you’re following Bitcoin on Gate or any other platform, it’s worth remembering these moments of historical context.