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What is an NFT? (No Hype, Just Facts)

January 2026 · 7 min read

NFT stands for "Non-Fungible Token." In plain English: a unique digital asset that cannot be copied or replaced with something identical.

Fungible vs. Non-Fungible (Why It Matters)

Type Example Interchangeable?
Fungible 1 BTC = any other 1 BTC ✅ Yes
Non-Fungible Your house deed ≠ neighbor's deed ❌ No

What Can an NFT Represent?

  • Digital Art: The most common use case (CryptoPunks, BAYC).
  • Music / Videos: Artists can sell directly to fans without a label.
  • Gaming Items: Skins, weapons, land — that you truly own and can sell.
  • Real-World Assets: Property deeds, event tickets, university diplomas.
  • Membership / Access: "Token-gated" communities (e.g., hold this NFT → access Discord).

The 2021-2022 NFT Bubble (and What Happened After)

In 2021, NFT trading volume peaked at $17B. A "Bored Ape" sold for $3.4M. Then the market crashed ~95% in 2022-2023.

In 2026, NFTs are (mostly) no longer about speculation. The surviving use cases are gaming, music royalties, and token-gated communities.

How to Buy an NFT (Step-by-Step)

  1. Set up a wallet (MetaMask for Ethereum, Phantom for Solana).
  2. Buy ETH (or SOL) from an exchange.
  3. Send ETH to your wallet.
  4. Go to OpenSea or Magic Eden.
  5. Connect your wallet, browse, and click "Buy Now."
  6. Pay the gas fee (in ETH) + the NFT price.

⚠️ Warning

Most NFTs are illiquid — you might not be able to sell them when you want. Only buy what you can afford to hold indefinitely.

Royalties: How Creators Get Paid

One genuinely useful NFT feature: creators can embed a royalty (e.g., 5%) into the smart contract. Every time the NFT is resold, the creator automatically gets paid. This was hard to enforce before NFTs.

The "Right-Click Save" Argument

Critics say: "I can just right-click and save the image for free, so why pay?"

Response: owning the NFT is like owning the original Mona Lisa — you can buy a poster, but you don't own the original. Whether that matters is up to you.

The Bottom Line

NFTs are a technology, not an asset class. The technology enables verifiable ownership of digital (and eventually physical) assets. The 2021 speculation bubble is over — but the tech is still being built on.

If you're buying an NFT in 2026, make sure you actually want what it represents (art, game item, community access) — not just because you hope it'll 10x.

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