The early years of European crypto were defined by a small number of platforms trying to build the full stack — exchange, wallet, card, and payment gateway — without the regulatory clarity or capital to do it properly. SpectroCoin was founded in Vilnius in 2013 as one of the more ambitious of those early attempts, offering a crypto exchange, a Bitcoin debit card, a payment gateway for merchants, and multi-currency wallet functionality under a single platform. Its early Visa and Mastercard Bitcoin debit card — one of the first in Europe — was a genuine innovation that let crypto holders spend their holdings at any card-accepting merchant without converting in advance. The company received an Electronic Money Institution licence from the Bank of Lithuania, giving it the regulatory standing to issue payment cards and hold electronic money — a licence that the Bank of Lithuania was granting to crypto-adjacent businesses at a time when most European regulators were more cautious. SpectroCoin operates as part of the Bankera ecosystem, which has expanded into banking and lending products. In the Baltic crypto infrastructure landscape, SpectroCoin represents the early-mover generation — platforms that built the first European crypto financial products before the regulatory frameworks existed and that have survived the subsequent decade of market cycles and regulatory evolution.