Again and again, users on noise.cash tell me, "Why do you say BTC is worthless? Its price is so high. It's the most valuable coin ever." These users confuse price and value. They are two completely different things. Let me explain it to you.
I have already written here about what constitutes the true value of a coin. Now I'll write to you why the price has nothing to do with it at all.
Maybe they remind some of you of the Bitcoin Cash update on 15 November 2020. At that time, a fork took place in the Bitcoin Cash blockchain and a new coin called BCHA was created. Everyone who owned BCH before the fork could claim the same amount of BCHA. I wrote here how you could (and still can) do it. For 1 BCHA you got about 0.06 BCH at that time. 1 BCHA cost at the time approx. $15. On July 1, 2021 at 12:00 noon UTC, Bitcoin Cash ABC (BCHA) rebranded to eCash (XEC). That in itself is nothing unusual, but at the same time, the new currency was nominated differently 1 BCHA = 1,000,000 XEC.
On 1 July 1 BCHA cost about $35, after the changeover 1 XEC cost $0.000035. It was actually the same coin, just named differently and made much cheaper by the new nomination. Not much has changed for the owners of the coins. Those who owned 1 BCHA now own 1,000,000 XEC. That is all.
The coin has suddenly become much cheaper, but has it become more worthless than before? It is just as valuable (or worthless) as before. Only a few decimal places have been shifted.
Imagine if the creators of BCHA did it the other way around. They would decide that 1 XEC = 0.000001 BCHA. According to the new nomination, 1 XEC would cost a staggering 35,000,000 USD. It would be the most expensive coin ever, much more expensive than BTC. Would this make XEC more valuable? I think you can answer that question yourself.
That is why the high BTC price is nothing but a number. It has nothing to do with the value of the coin.
...and you will also help the author collect more tips.
Your explanation sort of sounds a lot like what happens when a company in the stock market does a stock split. You just own more of the same thing. Is that what you are driving at here?