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Cavemen bros to be billionaires

Getting filthy rich is so easy, even a caveman can do it.

Two destitute brothers living in a cave on the outskirts of Budapest, Hungary, could inherit a mammoth share of a $6.6 billion fortune left by their long-lost grandmother.

“We knew our mother came from a wealthy family, but she was a difficult person and severed ties with them, and then later abandoned us,” Geza Peladi, who until recently scavenged scrap metal, told Hungarian reporters.

“We lost touch with her and our father until she eventually died,” Geza, 43, told ATV television.

Now Geza, along with his brother, Zslot, and an unidentified sister in the United States, are believed to be the only heirs of their recently deceased maternal grandmother in Baden-Wurttenberg, Germany.

After they gather and submit proper documentation to claim their riches, Geza’s first wish is to find a woman to share his wealth.

“If all of this works out, it will certainly make up for the life we have had until now . . . No women would look at us living in a cave,” Geza said.

“But with money, maybe we can find a partner — and finally have a normal life.”