I recently looked again at the transaction distribution of a few old NFTs, and honestly, the liquidity is really stuck in that "small section near the floor." When the floor price loosens, the sell orders avalanche downward, and no matter how hot the narrative gets, it can't withstand the awkwardness of no one taking the bait. The royalty aspect is also quite delicate; setting it too high causes traders to bypass, setting it too low makes the community start to complain about "no development funds." Anyway, I no longer really buy into the slogans about NFTs; I prefer to look on-chain: who is buying and selling, whether the same addresses are flipping back and forth, whether the dumps are concentrated. By the way, I see everyone comparing RWA, US Treasury yields, and on-chain yield products—actually, NFTs are more like sentiment assets. If you really want to do profit calculations... you'll probably get educated. That's all for now, continuing to browse the browser.

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