7 min read
2020 brought with it many, many things, both bad and good. And while Bitcoin's bull run and the summer of DeFi grabbed the headlines, a quiet revolution was taking place in another corner of crypto: the world of non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
NFTs have been around for a few years now, powering crypto collectibles like CryptoKitties—but they're little more than a proof of concept for the unique, non-replicable cryptocurrency tokens. This summer, NFTs came of age in the wake of the decentralized finance boom, and went on to take the gaming, finance and art worlds by storm.
Decentralized finance, or DeFi, may just be the most important thing that happened to the NFT industry this year.
The premise of DeFi is simple, even though each project is its own insanely complicated puzzle box: decentralized, non-custodial and open-source financial products for all the Internet to use, run on code and, theoretically (but rarely in practice) free from human meddling.
DeFi started off as an incredibly broad term; a catch-all reference to any novel financial project powered by crypto.
But in June, DeFi centred around one thing: yield farming. That’s when Compound, a DeFi lending protocol, issued $COMP tokens to anyone who used it. Within a few days, $COMP was so valuable that people started taking out loans purely to farm the token. Other protocols followed suit and the summer of DeFi began.
The NFT industry followed suit, bringing two major innovations to the DeFi space…
One of the most popular types of DeFi protocol is the decentralized exchange—a cryptocurrency exchange on which anything can be listed; since it’s decentralized, regulators can’t shut it down.
In early 2020, Alexei Falin and Alex Salnikov created Rarible, a decentralized exchange for NFTs. This “decentralized” bit is important; it’s what sets Rarible apart from regular NFT exchanges, such as OpenSea or SuperRare. Decentralized exchanges devolve governance (the running of the exchange) to anyone who holds so-called governance tokens, such as Compound's $COMP.
And the only way to earn these governance tokens was to buy them on crypto exchanges or to use the platform. Though they’re supposed to be used for governance, in practice many holders simply use them to make money from using the exchange.
Two things happened: The first is that Rarible’s token price increased from $0.63 in late July to $8.54 in early September. (As of December 2020, it’s settled at around $2). The second is that initiatives like this kickstarted the NFT industry, which skyrocketed in volume.
The NFT also solved a problem that previously prevented investors from snapping them up.
It used to be that you could only buy a whole NFT. In that respect, they’re like physical objects: you can’t auction off one of Picasso’s brush strokes or a single paint pot lobbed by Jackson Pollock.
But several NFT developers thought that shouldn’t apply to digital art, so they took to DeFi to build tools that cut NFTs up into tiny little pieces, which were then tradable on popular decentralized exchanges such as Uniswap.
The whole point of this is to extract liquidity (eke out more money) from NFTs that otherwise sit idle in collectors’ wallets until they’re sold.
But if you can convert an NFT to thousands of regular, fungible ERC-20 tokens, you can then plug those tokens into DeFi smart contracts to sip up those sweet, sweet yields. Great examples of this in 2020 were Singapore-based NIFTEX and Polyient Games.
Video game developers got into non-fungible tokens in 2020 in a big way. For games developers, the attraction of NFTs is obvious; each token can represent a digital sword, virtual piece of armor or soccer player, ready for use in a video game.
Crypto videogames took off—admittedly, most were little more than browser games based solely around micro-transactions, something long considered the scourge of the videogame industry.
But they did take off, inasmuch as they started to attract big names, a whole lot of money and tons of users.
Gods Unchained, a blockchain-based trading card game similar to Hearthstone, whose cards are all represented by NFTs, now has a market cap of $10 million.
Axie Infinity, an Ethereum-based crypto-collectibles game based around battling monsters, raised $860,000 from a token sale in November.
And Animoca Brands, a licensing company, signed the Care Bears, Shaun the Sheep, The Smurfs and Bratz. As part of the licensing deals, the brands will hold plots of land in Animoca’s upcoming virtual second-life imitation, The Sandbox, which is due to launch in public beta this month.
Large gaming studios, such as French gaming house Ubisoft, also gave NFTs a go. Ubisoft created an NFT-based game for Raving Rabbids; small, terrifying cartoon bunnies that star in their own games franchise. The game, Rabbids Tokens, involved “stealing” NFTs from other users.
Lots of these NFTs go for crazy amounts of money. In December, a collector bought a virtual Monaco racing circuit for $223,000. A virtual one—and the game’s not even in 3D. (Nor is it, and please be quiet about this, very good at all at present!)
All NFT roads eventually lead to crypto art. This is where crypto’s creative and rebellious streak comes into its own. Artists have flocked to NFTs in droves to take advantage of their offering of true digital ownership, meaning that people finally have reason to pay money for digital art.
Nonfungible.com, a metrics site that tracks the NFT industry, shows that things picked up for crypto art in the latter half of the year—when the DeFi boom came to market, and later Bitcoin’s bull run.
But while NFT technology unites artists, that’s about it—the NFT art world is about as wacky as they come, and in 2020 things got even stranger. Some people got into crypto art to make art out of money, while others found in NFTs an audience willing them to pay eye-melting, spleen-rupturing amounts of money.
In October, the artist Ben Gentilli sold an NFT-linked artwork for $131,250 at Sotheby’s, an influential art auction. Called Block 21, it depicted a “digital portrait” of Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto. The circular panel, one of 40, contains hundreds of thousands of digits that make up Bitcoin’s original code.
Connected to the panel is an NFT that displays the coordinates for the piece. Currently, it’s in New York.
Among other high profile artists that joined the NFT fray this year are José Delbo, an 87-year-old Argentinian comic book artist who sold one of his pieces—a collaboration with Canadian crypto artist Trevor Jones—for $111,377 in ETH.
The runaway star of the NFT art scene, however, is Beeple—the pseudonym of Mike Winkelman, a famous digital artist who’s created a music video for Flying Lotus and concert visuals for Nicki Minaj, Justin Bieber and others. Ahead of the US election, he sold an NFT that bore an animation of Donald Trump and Joe Biden in utero for $66,666.60. The NFT was dynamic—it would mutate following the outcome.
In December, a sale of Beeple's work on Gemini-backed art marketplace Nifty Gateway racked up an astonishing $582,000 in five minutes. And a few short days later, one investor made a last-second bid of $777,777 for a Beeple artwork; in total, the auction racked up more than $3.5 million in sales.
One thing's for certain: NFTs have well and truly arrived in 2020.
Decrypt-a-cookie
This website or its third-party tools use cookies. Cookie policy By clicking the accept button, you agree to the use of cookies.