By Emmanuel Thomas l Tuesday, Dec. 23.25
FORGET rockets to Mars or buying social media apps. The new ultimate billionaire ego-trip isn’t a yacht—it’s a small army of mini-mes.
The fertility industry is currently a Wild West. We have laws about how many fish you can catch in a pond, yet a billionaire can “over-fish” the human gene pool with zero oversight. It’s time for the regulators to step in. If we don’t set limits on these “super-donors” now, we’re not building a better future—we’re just living in Pavel Durov’s petri dish
Telegram boss Pavel Durov’s latest boast that he’s fathered 100 children through sperm donation, coupled with his “free IVF” giveaway, isn’t just a quirky bit of tech-bro philanthropy.
It’s a chilling glimpse into a world where the ultra-wealthy treat human genetics like a software update.
Durov frames his “seed-spreading” as a “civic duty,” claiming he wants to help families by sharing his “high-quality” DNA.
Let’s call it what it is: The Billionaire God Complex.
There is a staggering arrogance in believing that because you built a messaging app, the world is crying out for 100 more versions of your chin and your IQ.
It’s the ultimate narcissism—treating the next generation not as individuals, but as a “legacy project” to be scaled like a startup.
Beyond the ego, there is a very real, very scary biological risk.
Accidental Inbreeding: With 100+ children in 12 countries, many of whom are anonymous, what happens in 20 years when “Durov Baby A” meets “Durov Baby B” at a bar?
The “Master Race” Trap: By offering free IVF only to those who use his sperm, Durov is essentially running a private eugenics programme.
We are moving toward a “designer baby” market where the poor are priced out and the rich get to copy-paste their own faces across the globe.
Durov’s promise to leave his $17 billion fortune to his biological brood is perhaps the most cynical part of the deal.
He’s dangling a golden carrot in front of parents, turning a child’s birth into a lottery ticket.
But a $17 billion inheritance is a poor substitute for a father.
These children aren’t being brought into the world to be loved; they are being created to be “assets” in a billionaire’s dynastic strategy.
The fertility industry is currently a Wild West. We have laws about how many fish you can catch in a pond, yet a billionaire can “over-fish” the human gene pool with zero oversight.
It’s time for the regulators to step in. If we don’t set limits on these “super-donors” now, we’re not building a better future—we’re just living in Pavel Durov’s petri dish.
What do you think? Is Pavel a hero or a creep? Let us know!

