

Follow Mark on X.
Now, letās talk about Robin Hood, shall we? You know, the dashing lad in tights who gallivanted around Sherwood Forest, robbing the rich to feed the poor? Great story, that. But if you think about it, Robin Hoodās modus operandi was a bit outdated. I mean, why steal from the rich when you can just build your own magical currency and make the rich irrelevant? Enter: Satoshi Nakamoto, the digital ageās answer to Robin Hoodā¦ without all the uncomfortable wardrobe choices.
Now, for those of you unfamiliar with Satoshi, he (or she, or they, or possibly your nanāwho knows?) is the mysterious creator of Bitcoin. And instead of sticking it to the man by looting gold-filled wagons, Satoshi played the long game: they built a brand-new financial system. A decentralized, peer-to-peer one that doesnāt rely on any one bank, government, or stocky sheriff demanding his cut. Howās that for a 21st-century upgrade?
Hereās the best bit: Satoshi didnāt steal from the rich. Oh no. Too predictable. Too clichĆ©. Instead, Satoshi āstoleā from themselves. You see, they could have stuck around to be hailed as the genius creator of Bitcoināmaybe even gotten a cameo on some Netflix documentary, complete with dramatic music and close-ups of keyboard clicks. But they didnāt. Like a modern-day hero with absolutely zero interest in a knighthood (or any āhood,ā for that matter), Satoshi just disappeared. Left behind the keys to a financial revolution and ghosted us all faster than someone with bad Wi-Fi on a Zoom call.
And whatās even funnier? The 1.1 million Bitcoin Satoshi mined in the early days are still sitting there. Unmoved. Untouched. Satoshi didnāt even cash out like some reality show contestant after winning a lifetime supply of anonymity. Nope. They just let the fortune pile up like itās the worldās biggest āTake a penny, leave a pennyā jar. Talk about self-controlāthough, if weāre honest, itās the ultimate form of trolling, isnāt it? āHereās a gazillion dollars. But you canāt have it, and neither can I. Ha!ā
Now, letās talk about the Robin Hood parallels. Robin Hood, bless his heart, had the best of intentions, didnāt he? Steal from the bloated, greedy rich, give to the needy poor. What a guy. But have you ever tried stealing from the rich? Theyāre quite good at hanging onto their stuffāwhole legal teams dedicated to it, in fact. So instead of playing that game, Satoshi created a system where everyone could participateārich, poor, and that guy down the street who always tries to sell you āvintageā VHS tapes. And no oneās the wiser who Satoshi even is. The ultimate āone for all, and all for oneā scenario, without the faff of crossbows and merry men.
And thatās where Bitcoin comes in. Itās like Robin Hoodās treasure chest, but with a lot less horseback riding and far more math. Instead of relying on central banks to tell you what you can and canāt do with your own money (cheeky, arenāt they?), Bitcoin puts power back in your hands. You donāt need permission. You donāt need a bank account. Heck, you donāt even need to wear green tights. (Though if you want to wear green tights, go aheadāIām not here to judge. Much.)
So, while Robin Hood was running around with a bow and arrow, Satoshi gave us all a digital sword. Sure, itās invisible and runs on blockchain technology rather than actual pointy bits, but it slices through the nonsense of financial gatekeepers just the same. Want to send money to a mate across the globe without paying a middleman? Done. Want to opt out of a system where rich people get richer and the rest of us just watch? Hereās your ticket.
But the piĆØce de rĆ©sistance, the true work of genius here? Satoshi didnāt wait around for applause. No book tours, no TED Talks, no Vanity Fair spreads. Just dropped the mic (or laptop, as it were) and disappeared into the digital night like the true anonymous legend they are. Satoshi is the Robin Hood we deserveāand perhaps the one we didnāt even know we needed. The hero who built a financial revolution, didnāt take a single penny for themselves, and vanished.
Itās the kind of modern-day Robin Hood story that makes you think: Why steal from the rich when you can steal from yourselfāand give everyone a shot at the loot?
Well played, Satoshi. Well played.
This article is a Take. Opinions expressed are entirely the author's and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.
Full story here: