- Luke Broyles believes skepticism around Bitcoin will persist even if BTC reaches $5M–$10M.
- The real challenge isn’t technical but psychological—convincing people Bitcoin can improve everyday life.
- Broyles sees real estate integration as the faster path to adoption, rather than small-scale investing.
Skepticism has been glued to Bitcoin since its earliest days, and according to Luke Broyles, that shadow isn’t going anywhere—even if Bitcoin rockets to jaw-dropping levels. Speaking with Natalie Brunell on the Coin Stories podcast, the Bitcoin Adviser argued that people will keep doubting the asset long after it becomes a major part of global wealth.
“I think Bitcoin will be at $5 million, $10 million or more, and people will still be saying, ‘Yeah, well, it’s only 8% of world assets now, so it can’t really go higher, right?’” Broyles said, pointing out that disbelief always tags along no matter the price milestone.
The Psychological Barrier
Bitcoin critics have had the same tune for years. Every time the asset sets a new all-time high, the voices claim it’s “topped out.” And whenever the price dips, they call it dead for good. Yet here it stands—still climbing back, still making new records. Most recently, Bitcoin hit $124,100 on July 14 before cooling off to around $109,000.
Broyles doesn’t think the real battle is technical. It’s not about scalability, block space, or mining. It’s psychological. “Unfortunately, I don’t think a lot of people will make that switch until they see how Bitcoin actually improves their everyday lives,” he said. For him, the skepticism is less about charts and more about human reluctance to accept something new.

Real Estate as a Game Changer
Where Broyles does see adoption accelerating is in Bitcoin’s connection with real-world finance. Specifically, real estate. He argued that tying Bitcoin into home refinancing and equity loans could change the game faster than convincing skeptics to buy small chunks over time.
“Is it harder to tell a skeptic, ‘Buy $1,000 of Bitcoin every month for 200 months,’ or to show them, ‘Hey, you can refinance your home and roll that equity straight into Bitcoin’? I think that’s the moment that will blow people’s minds,” Broyles said.
A Long Road Ahead
Even with mainstream headlines, ETFs, and institutional money flowing in, adoption is still slowed by plain confusion. A 2024 survey by Swyftx showed 43% of respondents hadn’t touched crypto simply because they didn’t understand how it works. For Broyles, that lack of understanding—and the skepticism tied to it—means Bitcoin may be decades into its rise before people stop underestimating it.