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Most cryptocurrency wealth stories follow a familiar script: someone buys a small amount of an obscure token, forgets about it, and wakes up rich. Pi Network’s potential trajectory, according to one analyst’s breakdown, does not follow that script. The numbers presented focus on a straightforward question: at realistic price points, how many Pi tokens would an investor need to reach $1 million?
The model is built on price scenarios rather than hype-driven assumptions. If Pi reaches a $10 billion market cap and trades at $1, an investor would need 1 million Pi tokens to reach $1 million. At current levels, that is estimated to equal roughly a $188,000 entry.
In a $20 billion valuation scenario, Pi could trade at $2. That would cut the requirement to 500,000 tokens, or about $94,000 invested today.
In a more aggressive case, if Pi climbs to a $30 billion market cap and trades at $3, the requirement drops further to around 330,000 tokens, with an estimated $63,000 investment.
The outlook is tied to Pi’s ecosystem development and recent developments, including its listing on Kraken, which is described as improving liquidity and access to global markets.
The analyst also points to Pi’s mobile-first mining model and a user base of more than 60 million. The projection further links potential valuation growth to a transition toward utility through smart contracts and applications.
Despite the upside, the projections highlight a key issue: control. While Pi uses the Stellar Consensus Protocol, the analyst notes that much of the network’s validation and token distribution remains tied to the core team.
That creates a trade-off. In short, the path to $1 million with Pi is presented as possible, but it depends on execution, adoption, and whether the project can transition from hype to real utility.

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