Bitcoin has been honored as the oldest and most valuable crypto, while El Salvador is recognized as the first country to adopt it as legal tender. 
Bitcoin has made its first appearance in the Guinness World Records, now officially honored as the “first decentralized cryptocurrency.”
Its inclusion was part of a larger category labeled “cryptomania”, under which many other blockchain-related phenomena were mentioned. 
According to the latest edition of the reference book, Bitcoin is the “oldest,” “most valuable,” and “first-decentralized” cryptocurrency. 
Since its first-of-a-kind creation in 2009, the cryptocurrency has remained larger than any other by market cap. While thousands of others have emerged over time, Bitcoin continues to dominate over 40% of the market with over $370 billion in cumulative value.
On its online record page, Bitcoin is described as a solution to the problem of the “trusted third party,” which was formerly required to facilitate digital payments. Otherwise, it was impossible to maintain a fair and honest ledger of transactions where people didn’t spend the same money more than once. 
“The Bitcoin network is solving the double spend problem with a “trustless” mechanism that does not require any third party (e.g., banks) to verify transactions; and it achieves that with validators (i.e., miners, in PoW.),” reads the post. 
Meanwhile, the infamous CryptoPunks NFT collection earned recognition for the “most expensive NFT collectible,” after Deepak Thapliya purchased CryptoPunk #5822 for $23.7 million in ETH on February 12th. Though Beeple’s artwork sold as an NFT for $69.3 million in 2021, it didn’t match the record’s NFT criteria as “limited-edition sets of artwork built around pre-rendered templates.”
The “most valuable fan token,” was the Manchester City Fan Token, which had a market cap of $47.1 million as of March 24th – the book’s reference date. As of now, the token’s market cap has slumped to just $24.8 million. 
Finally, El Salvador earned the record for “first country to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender,” in June of 2021.  So far, the only other country to do the same is the Central African Republic in April of this year. 
It’s not just the record book making room for crypto: Merriam-Webster added a sea of crypto-native language to its lexicon last month. 
Among its newly defined words were “altcoin” – tokens “regarded as alternatives to established cryptocurrencies and especially to Bitcoin,” – and “metaverse” – “a persistent virtual environment that allows access to and interoperability of multiple individual virtual realities.”
Andrew is a content writer with a passion for Bitcoin. He became familiar with Bitcoin back in 2013, but began diligently studying the blockchain technology and its economic implications in 2017. Ever since, he’s believed in the network’s power to replace the current global monetary system, and provide financial freedom to billions worldwide.
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