$BTC

Robert Kiyosaki, the legendary author of Rich Dad Poor Dad, has once again made headlines with his bold stance on Bitcoin. On June 18, Kiyosaki reiterated his belief that Bitcoin is heading toward $1 million per coin by 2030, and he made it clear: it’s not the price that matters most — it’s how much you actually own.

"Price is Temporary. Ownership is Power."

Kiyosaki posted on X:$ETH

> “Poor people focus on price. Rich people on quantity.”

He emphasized that real wealth comes not from watching price charts, but from how much of a real asset you own. Whether it's gold, silver, or bitcoin, his focus remains the same: control as much of it as you can.

He explained how he started buying BTC when it was just $6,000 and bought as much as he could afford. Looking back, he wishes he had more "fake money" to buy more bitcoin. For him, it’s never just been about the spot price — it’s about being ready for what’s coming next.

Bitcoin = Financial Armor$BTC

With the global economy on shaky ground, inflation rising, AI threatening jobs, and trust in fiat currency at an all-time low, Kiyosaki sees bitcoin as a lifeline.

In his words:#BTC110KToday?

> “In 2030, the probability is bitcoin will be $1 million a coin. While price is important… the rich will still be those with the most bitcoin.”#BinanceAlphaAlert

This mindset isn’t new for him. Back in 2013, he wrote Rich Dad’s Prophecy, where he warned of the kind of economic collapse we’re seeing signs of today. He now says the world’s biggest financial crash could hit by 2025 — and it’s already starting.

A Call to Prepare#ETH

Kiyosaki’s message to all of us is clear:

> Don’t just track prices. Start accumulating assets — bitcoin, gold, silver — anything that holds real value.

He believes this is the only real protection against what he calls “fake money” — the paper currencies controlled by governments and central banks.

He challenges everyone to ask themselves:

“How many ounces of gold, silver, and how many bitcoin do you actually own?”

Because at the end of the day, the real difference between the rich and the poor won’t be how much they earned, but what they held onto when the system shook.