Second, I would say technologies that allow us to more effectively preserve our financial privacy and freedom in developed countries. We’ve been talking a lot about CBDCs (central bank digital currencies). We talked yesterday with Natalie Smolinski, who’s gonna be testifying in a congressional hearing tomorrow about how CBDCs are a sales funnel for Satan.
I think technologies that allow the average person — who isn’t by default fixated on financial privacy — technologies that allow them to adopt that really easily and natively are gonna become more and more important as the challenges that we face in the world continue to heat up.
Those are the things that are most interesting to me.
Killeen: So P, I was just going to say that we see things similarly here, and what one of the things that Stillmark does is look at how the technology can be used to meet people where they are in terms of both adopting BTC, the asset, and Bitcoin, the protocol.
So I’m gonna give an interesting example of this, which is a company that we fairly recently invested in called Pink Frog. And so what Pink Frog is really, it’s a game studio, but what they’re going to do is they’re going to integrate Lightning Network in order to provide a better community experience for their gamers, and they’re going to use sats as rewards in the game, and also rewards between users.
We’ve seen that before and maybe that’s not interesting described in the way that I just laid it out, but here’s the detail that I think really makes it compelling and shows an advancement in the Bitcoin ecosystem, broadly. This is a team that is not coming from the Bitcoin perspective, but is coming from the gaming perspective.
So a team coming from King, which is one of the most prestigious studios and successful studios in the gaming world, and it’s the team that introduced and grew Candy Crush. And Candy Crush is a game that has seen 100 million monthly active users as an example of the adoption that this team has been able to achieve.
Now, what they did when they left King and launched Pink Frog is they thought deeply about the gaming experience and how it could be made better for their gamers. And what they’re doing is they’re looking at a young millennial, a Gen Z audience. So they’re looking at like the TikTok audience and they’re trying to see how technology or other sorts of innovations can interweave with what these gamers are looking for.
So they’re not really trying to force bitcoin in, they’re identifying Bitcoin as a way to serve a need and a want that they’ve observed in their user base. And so it’s really exciting to see the technologies be used in this way, which is just to solve problems or to offer some sort fun response to a thing that people want.
And rather than trying to convince people that they want bitcoin, it’s using Bitcoin technologies to meet people where they are and to integrate with their lives or the way that they’re spending their time. Pink Frog is a nice, fun example of that. Then, going back to the very beginning of our conversation, Taro was the serious application of that, where when we introduced Lightning Network in emerging markets, and I’ll use El Salvador again as the example, we saw that people really needed to be banked through Bitcoin and through Lightning Network. They needed to be able to engage with their local community and online, without a debit or credit card, and really that was Lightning Network for them. But BTC’s volatility was difficult for people of lower socioeconomic status. So Taro comes in to meet people exactly where they’re at and to offer a solution for something that they know they need, which are tools to engage both in their local and in the global economy.
What you’re saying really resonates with me because I’m excited about exactly the same, which is the way that Bitcoin can rise to a variety of challenges that future users have.