NFT Trading Crashes 90% With No Recovery In Sight — What's Taking Its Place

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 days ago
The NFT market has imploded with trading volume down more than 90% from peak levels. Top collections have collapsed to near-zero, active traders have vanished, and even crypto insiders say the speculative frenzy isn't coming back.

Non-fungible tokens always had the financial stability of casino chips. One minute you're up, the next you've lost everything. Sure, a few lucky souls hit the jackpot — like those who scooped up Pudgy Penguin coins at their 2024 lows and watched them rise from the ashes. But for everyone else holding NFTs? Those asset values aren't coming back in 2026.

Plenty of serious Bitcoin investors never understood why NFTs became a thing at all. The whole phenomenon made digital assets look like a science fiction gambling den for overgrown kids, muddying the waters for institutions that might otherwise take blockchain and cryptocurrencies seriously.

"I hate to say it, but most NFTs today are simply worthless, they don't have any real or redeemable value," said Steven Willinger, General Partner at Blockchain Builders Fund, who previously led investments at Coinbase Ventures. "That said, I still NFTs play a meaningful role as a technology layer, quietly powering real-world assets, gaming ecosystems, and on-chain identity."

Think back to the mid-2000s hype years when Bored Ape Yacht Club had themed burger joints in California and crypto media couldn't stop talking about digital monkeys. That attention drove prices skyward. "That whole market became a zero-sum game of speculation," Willinger explained. "That money's long gone, and there's little reason to think it's coming back."

The carnage is real. Take the 2022 Australian Open "Artball" NFT program — nearly 10,000 images that once sold for around 0.7 ETH have bottomed out at maybe 0.01 ETH after the program was killed. The global NFT market cap as of Nov. 18 stood at $221.53 billion, down 66.3% in just 24 hours. Meanwhile, Bitcoin Puppets, a top 15 NFT collection, hasn't seen a single sale since April 29.

The Numbers Tell a Brutal Story

By most measures, NFT participation has cratered somewhere between 90% and 96% from peak levels. In 2022, during the height of the frenzy, the number of active NFT traders peaked around 529,000. By early 2025, that figure had collapsed to only about 19,600 active traders — a staggering 96% drop in participation, according to market data.

Even collections that survived are barely breathing. Top NFT CryptoPunks hit an all-time low of $19.70 on Aug. 5, 2024 and now trades at $31.10 with single-digit sales volume. User engagement has collapsed alongside sales volume, even as some speculators manage to eke out gains.

Dapp Radar reported back in January that 2024 was the worst year for NFTs. This year isn't shaping up any better. But for Pudgy Penguins NFT owner and Web3 entrepreneur Luca Netz, hope springs eternal.

From Hype to Relic

Galaxy Research analysts led by Thaddeus Pinakiewicz called NFTs a relic of the 2020–2021 boom in an October newsletter.

"Volumes are down more than 90% from their peak, floor prices for all but the most iconic collections have drifted toward zero, and many survivors have pivoted to fungible tokens. But as the Game of Thrones line goes, 'What is dead may never die.' NFTs haven't disappeared; they've simply evolved," the Galaxy Research team wrote.

The original use cases — community-building and pure speculation — have been absorbed by memecoins, which offer the same thrill with better liquidity.

"A few collections like Fidenza, CryptoPunks, and Pudgy Penguins have held some value because of their art, legacy, or community, but they're rare exceptions trading far below their highs," Willinger said. "There were also some interesting attempts to improve price discovery, things like floor pricing, rarity-based analytics, and auction-based lending, but none of that could save NFTs without real demand."

What's Next?

In October, global NFT trading volume across chains managed a classic dead cat bounce, jumping 30% over September sales to $546 million. It was reportedly the highest monthly total of the year, which tells you everything about how far the market has fallen.

NFTs still have a future, just not as speculative collectibles. The technology is finding new life as backend infrastructure quietly powering real-world assets, gaming ecosystems, and digital identity systems. But most standalone NFT projects that never found real product-market fit have been abandoned. "Those are the forgotten ERC-721s buried under newer on-chain activity," Willinger said.

The NFT boom is over. What remains is a more boring but potentially more useful technology layer that most people will never see or care about. Which is probably how it should have been all along.

NFT Trading Crashes 90% With No Recovery In Sight — What's Taking Its Place

MarketDash Editorial Team
12 days ago
The NFT market has imploded with trading volume down more than 90% from peak levels. Top collections have collapsed to near-zero, active traders have vanished, and even crypto insiders say the speculative frenzy isn't coming back.

Non-fungible tokens always had the financial stability of casino chips. One minute you're up, the next you've lost everything. Sure, a few lucky souls hit the jackpot — like those who scooped up Pudgy Penguin coins at their 2024 lows and watched them rise from the ashes. But for everyone else holding NFTs? Those asset values aren't coming back in 2026.

Plenty of serious Bitcoin investors never understood why NFTs became a thing at all. The whole phenomenon made digital assets look like a science fiction gambling den for overgrown kids, muddying the waters for institutions that might otherwise take blockchain and cryptocurrencies seriously.

"I hate to say it, but most NFTs today are simply worthless, they don't have any real or redeemable value," said Steven Willinger, General Partner at Blockchain Builders Fund, who previously led investments at Coinbase Ventures. "That said, I still NFTs play a meaningful role as a technology layer, quietly powering real-world assets, gaming ecosystems, and on-chain identity."

Think back to the mid-2000s hype years when Bored Ape Yacht Club had themed burger joints in California and crypto media couldn't stop talking about digital monkeys. That attention drove prices skyward. "That whole market became a zero-sum game of speculation," Willinger explained. "That money's long gone, and there's little reason to think it's coming back."

The carnage is real. Take the 2022 Australian Open "Artball" NFT program — nearly 10,000 images that once sold for around 0.7 ETH have bottomed out at maybe 0.01 ETH after the program was killed. The global NFT market cap as of Nov. 18 stood at $221.53 billion, down 66.3% in just 24 hours. Meanwhile, Bitcoin Puppets, a top 15 NFT collection, hasn't seen a single sale since April 29.

The Numbers Tell a Brutal Story

By most measures, NFT participation has cratered somewhere between 90% and 96% from peak levels. In 2022, during the height of the frenzy, the number of active NFT traders peaked around 529,000. By early 2025, that figure had collapsed to only about 19,600 active traders — a staggering 96% drop in participation, according to market data.

Even collections that survived are barely breathing. Top NFT CryptoPunks hit an all-time low of $19.70 on Aug. 5, 2024 and now trades at $31.10 with single-digit sales volume. User engagement has collapsed alongside sales volume, even as some speculators manage to eke out gains.

Dapp Radar reported back in January that 2024 was the worst year for NFTs. This year isn't shaping up any better. But for Pudgy Penguins NFT owner and Web3 entrepreneur Luca Netz, hope springs eternal.

From Hype to Relic

Galaxy Research analysts led by Thaddeus Pinakiewicz called NFTs a relic of the 2020–2021 boom in an October newsletter.

"Volumes are down more than 90% from their peak, floor prices for all but the most iconic collections have drifted toward zero, and many survivors have pivoted to fungible tokens. But as the Game of Thrones line goes, 'What is dead may never die.' NFTs haven't disappeared; they've simply evolved," the Galaxy Research team wrote.

The original use cases — community-building and pure speculation — have been absorbed by memecoins, which offer the same thrill with better liquidity.

"A few collections like Fidenza, CryptoPunks, and Pudgy Penguins have held some value because of their art, legacy, or community, but they're rare exceptions trading far below their highs," Willinger said. "There were also some interesting attempts to improve price discovery, things like floor pricing, rarity-based analytics, and auction-based lending, but none of that could save NFTs without real demand."

What's Next?

In October, global NFT trading volume across chains managed a classic dead cat bounce, jumping 30% over September sales to $546 million. It was reportedly the highest monthly total of the year, which tells you everything about how far the market has fallen.

NFTs still have a future, just not as speculative collectibles. The technology is finding new life as backend infrastructure quietly powering real-world assets, gaming ecosystems, and digital identity systems. But most standalone NFT projects that never found real product-market fit have been abandoned. "Those are the forgotten ERC-721s buried under newer on-chain activity," Willinger said.

The NFT boom is over. What remains is a more boring but potentially more useful technology layer that most people will never see or care about. Which is probably how it should have been all along.