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Just went down the rabbit hole on NFT history and honestly, the valuations from a few years back are wild. Most expensive nft ever sold? That's Pak's The Merge hitting $91.8 million back in December 2021. But here's the thing - it wasn't some single collector flexing. Over 28,000 people bought into it by purchasing different quantities of the piece. Each unit went for around $575, and people stacked them up to own a bigger share. Pretty different from how we usually think about high-value digital art.
What's interesting is how the most expensive nft landscape is basically dominated by a few names. Beeple came in second with Everydays: The First 5000 Days at $69 million in early 2021. Dude literally created one piece every single day for 5000 days straight and compiled them into this massive collage. The starting bid was only $100 but the hype was real. Then you had the Clock collaboration between Pak and Julian Assange that pulled in $52.7 million from AssangeDAO supporters. That one's actually dynamic - updates daily to track imprisonment days. Pretty powerful statement piece.
The thing about expensive NFTs is they're not always about aesthetics alone. Beeple's Human One went for $29 million partly because it's this evolving kinetic sculpture that changes based on time of day. It's over 7 feet tall with a 16K display and Beeple can remotely update it. That's genuinely novel compared to static digital art.
Now CryptoPunks, they're the OG collection that basically proved NFTs could hold serious value. CryptoPunk #5822 - the alien one - sold for $23 million. There are only 9 aliens in the entire 10,000-piece series so scarcity hits different. Other punks on the expensive list include #7523 (the one with the medical mask) at $11.75 million, and several others in the $6-10 million range. The fact that CryptoPunks from 2017 are still commanding these prices years later says something about project longevity.
TPunk #3442 was interesting because Justin Sun's $10.5 million purchase in 2021 basically created FOMO on the Tron blockchain. It's called The Joker because it looks like Batman's villain. Before his purchase, these were minting for like $123 each. One whale move changed the entire trajectory.
Then you've got artists like XCOPY selling Right-click and Save As Guy for $7 million to Cozomo de' Medici. That piece is meta as hell - created in 2018 for 1 ETH ($90 at the time), and the title itself is a commentary on NFT misconceptions. Dmitri Cherniak's Ringers #109 from Art Blocks hit $6.93 million, and Beeple's Crossroad - a 10-second video response to the 2020 election - went for $6.6 million.
Looking at this pattern, the most expensive nft sales aren't random. They involve either massive scarcity (like Alien Punks), pioneering artists with established reputations (Beeple, Pak), innovative mechanics (The Merge's quantity system), or cultural significance (Clock's activism angle). The market's evolved a lot since 2021 though. These records still stand but the overall NFT space has matured and fragmented.
What's wild is that Axie Infinity and Bored Ape Yacht Club have higher total market volume ($4.27B and $3.16B respectively), but they're collections, not individual pieces. The most expensive nft as a single work still belongs to Pak. The space went from 'what even is an NFT' to billion-dollar markets in like two years. Definitely worth studying if you're curious about how digital assets actually gain value.