You handle the taps. The protocol handles the hard part
So, is Bitcoin user friendly? Buying it takes a few taps in apps people already trust, and people across Africa send it on basic feature phones with no internet on the device. The complexity lives at the protocol layer, where it secures the network. The part you touch is as simple as a banking app.
Bitcoin asks for no paperwork,
no ID, and no permission.
For the unbanked, the supposedly complicated system has the lower barrier to entry.
Opening a bank account means identity documents, paperwork, approval, and often a branch visit. Starting with Bitcoin means a phone, any phone. Through USSD services like Machankura, even a basic feature phone with no internet connection on the device can send and receive Bitcoin across eight African countries.Nobody has ever been required to understand money before using it. People spend dollars without understanding central banking and use the internet without reading a protocol. Bitcoin asks no more of you. The people adopting it fastest are non-technical users in economies with failing currencies, who care about the result and not the code. Adoption has never waited for understanding. It waits for usefulness.