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Bitcoin doesn’t need to conquer the world to succeed — it just needs to own its niche
There’s a common misconception: For Bitcoin to “succeed,” it must replace the entire financial system, defeat all banks, and become the currency used by all 8 billion people.
The truth is far simpler — and far more powerful:
👉 Bitcoin doesn’t need to dominate the world. It just needs to serve the one niche no one else can.

  1. Bitcoin solves a single problem: sovereign asset ownership in a trustless environment
No other blockchain can deliver this with the same level of certainty.
No bank, no company, no government can provide:
decentralized money
no single point of control
no money printing
no confiscation
no forced inflation
no censorship of transactions
That is Bitcoin’s niche. And serving that niche alone gives it a permanent reason to exist.

  1. A technology doesn’t need the majority — only the people who truly need it
Email never replaced postal mail 100%. Linux doesn’t need to beat Windows in market share. Gold doesn’t require everyone to wear gold. Signal doesn’t need a billion users to stay alive.
Likewise, Bitcoin only needs:
people who want to protect their assets
people storing long-term value
people in unstable economies
people with financial discipline
people escaping control
That alone is enough for Bitcoin to become a borderless financial force that cannot be eliminated.

  1. Great systems start with a niche — then grow naturally
In the early days:
The internet was for the military → then became global
YouTube was for random videos → then became the #1 platform
Facebook was for college students → then took over the world
Bitcoin follows the same pattern:
A tiny niche → becoming the standard for an entirely new asset class.
No forcing. No slogans. Just organic adoption.

  1. Bitcoin’s niche is exactly what no one else can provide
Stablecoins are great for payments. Banks excel at lending. Fintech offers excellent UX.
But only Bitcoin provides:
An asset that can’t be seized + can’t be inflated + can’t be manipulated.
That’s more than a niche. It’s a fundamental human right in the digital age.
As long as Bitcoin fulfills this need, it remains central to the future of global finance.

  1. Bitcoin’s success is measured by durability — not market share
Bitcoin doesn’t compete by counting users.
It competes with:
transparency
immutability
security
censorship resistance
long-term reliability
Just as gold doesn’t need anyone’s approval, Bitcoin doesn’t need global adoption to be “valid.” It only needs to remain stable, secure, and unbreakable.
That alone is success.

  1. Conclusion: Bitcoin wins by being the only thing in its niche
Bitcoin isn’t Facebook — it doesn’t need 2 billion users. It’s not Google — it doesn’t need all the world’s data. It’s not fiat — it doesn’t need the entire population.
Bitcoin is:
The strongest system of personal financial sovereignty humanity has ever created.
The niche was small in the beginning. But it’s a niche that will define the financial destiny of humanity for the next 100 years.
And as long as Bitcoin holds that niche, it has already succeeded — whether the world understands it or not.

50 sats \ 0 replies \ @kruw 16 Nov
Frankly, this is wrong. Bitcoin's security comes from transaction fees paid to miners. If Bitcoin is only used by a small niche of people, then they can easily be censored by a 51% attack.
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I strongly disagree
Bitcoin design assumes high Demand for blockspace when bitcoin subsidy actually goes to near zero (reward) transaction fee must replace so it require lots of economic activity lots of settling and blockspace competition that will require broad usage not a tiny niche
Just being valuable is not enogh for bitcoin
Even if bitcoin has high price if nobody uses it the fee market stays empty an attacker needs to outbid miner not market cap
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