But only one person can own the original. What do you think about the $3,600 Gucci Ghost!.?.!? Likewise, you didn't let me finish earlier. That image that Beeple was auctioning off at Christie's wound up costing $69 million, which, by the way, is $15 million more than Monet's painting Nymphas offered for in 2014.
However surely you've become aware of penguin neighborhoods!.?.!? Right, so ... people have actually long constructed communities based on things they own, and now it's occurring with NFTs. One community that's been extremely popular revolves around a collection of NFTs called Pudgy Penguins, but it's not the only neighborhood developed around the tokens.
Obviously, the common activities depend upon the neighborhood. For Pudgy Penguin or Bored Ape owners, it seems to involve vibing and sharing memes on Discord, or enhancing each other on their Pudgy Penguin Twitter avatars. That actually depends on whether you're an artist or a buyer. First off: I'm proud of you.
You might be interested in NFTs since it provides you a way to sell work that there otherwise may not be much of a market for. If you come up with a really cool digital sticker idea, what are you going to do? Offer it on the i, Message App Store? No chance.
One of the apparent advantages of purchasing art is it lets you economically support artists you like, and that's true with NFTs (which are way trendier than, like, Telegram stickers). Buying This Is Noteworthy gets you some basic use rights, like being able to publish the image online or set it as your profile image.
Ah, alright, yes. NFTs can work like any other speculative asset, where you purchase it and hope that the worth of it increases one day, so you can sell it for a profit. I feel kind of unclean for talking about that, however. In the boring, technical sense that every NFT is a special token on the blockchain.