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Been diving into NFT history lately and honestly, the prices some of these pieces went for are wild. Like, Pak's The Merge hitting $91.8 million back in 2021? That's still the highest sold NFT ever, and it wasn't even owned by one person - 28,893 collectors pooled together to buy it. Pretty crazy when you think about it.
Beeple's also got some insane records. His Everydays: The First 5000 Days sold for $69 million at Christie's, and that was just after starting at $100. The guy literally created one artwork every single day for 5,000 days and compiled them all into one massive piece. That's the kind of commitment that apparently justifies a nine-figure price tag.
Then there's the Clock - another Pak piece made with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. It's basically a timer counting down his imprisonment days, and AssangeDAO dropped $52.7 million on it in 2022. That one's more than just art though, it's like a political statement combined with NFT innovation.
CryptoPunks dominate the list too. CryptoPunk #5822 went for $23 million, and there are like nine different alien punks that are worth millions each. The whole CryptoPunk series started back in 2017 as basically free NFTs you could claim with an Ethereum wallet. Now individual pieces are selling for tens of millions. That's probably the wildest appreciation story in the NFT space.
Beeple's Human One is another one - $29 million for a kinetic sculpture that's constantly updating. It's like 16K video art running 24/7 in this polished aluminum frame. The artist can literally change it remotely, so it's always evolving. That's the kind of highest sold NFT that actually has physical presence too.
What's interesting is that most of these highest-priced NFTs came from like 2021-2022 when the market was absolutely crazy. We're talking about Beeple, Pak, CryptoPunks - these names dominated everything back then. Some pieces from smaller artists or newer projects are doing well now, but nothing's really broken those top records yet.
The whole thing shows how much the NFT space has matured though. It went from people thinking you could just right-click and save an image (XCOPY literally made an NFT about that and sold it for $7 million lol) to serious collectors paying nine figures for generative art, political statements, and evolving digital sculptures.
I'm curious if we'll ever see another highest sold NFT that breaks the $91.8 million record, or if that Pak piece is just gonna hold the crown forever. The market's definitely cooled down compared to 2021, but there's still some serious money flowing through these platforms.