Last Monday, an on-chain photo of a puppy in a knit beanie sold for slightly more than$4.3 million.
While such a statement might sound absurdāand this might not make a huge differenceāthe dog featured in the photo was no random hound, but Achi: the Shiba Inu from the iconic Dogwifhat internet meme.
At over $4.3 million, the AchiNFTbecame the most expensive meme NFT ever sold. But it was hardly the first. For years, the healthy overlap of internet and crypto cultures has spawned NFT incarnations of some of the most famous memes of all time.
Hereās a run down of the most expensive meme-inspired NFTs ever acquired.
The Dogwifhat meme (cropped). Image: Foundation
This weekās massiveDogwifhat NFT saleāwhich clocked in at1,210.759 ETH, worth $4,311,234 at the time of purchaseāowes much of its success to the popularity of the original Dogwifhat meme, which emerged online in late 2019. But more than anything else, the piece likely fetched such an eye-popping price due to the runaway success of WIF, aSolanameme coin inspired by the meme that has exploded in value over the last few months.
Since its creation in December, WIF hasskyrocketedin value. Last week,the token reached a record$3 billionmarket capitalization, shortly after several WIF community members raisednearly $700,000to plaster the face of Achiāthe dog featured in the memeāon Sphere, the massive LED screen-covered arena in Las Vegas.
The NFT photo was auctioned by Achiās South Korean owners, who netted some $4.1 million on the sale after feesāfar more than they ever expected to earn from the photo of their puppy they casually took in 2018, auction coordinatorPathtoldDecrypt. The photo sold toGCR, a prominent pseudonymouscrypto trader, via an auction on the digital art platform Foundation.
Kabosu, the meme mascot of Dogecoin. Image: Very.Auction
Prior to last week, the record for most expensive meme-related NFT of all time was held by the godfather of all dog-related memes: the original Doge.
That sale made waves back in the heyday of the NFT boom, on June 11, 2021āwhen an NFT of the original photo that inspired the Doge meme, taken by Japanese kindergarten teacher Atsuko Sato of her Shiba Inu Kabosu,soldfor millions of dollars (then a first).
The NFT ended up selling for a larger sum of ETH than the Dogwifhat NFT:1,696.9 ETH. Due to Ethereumās lower price at the time, though, that sum equaled roughly $4.234 million. The Doge meme wasnāt just integral to internet culture at the time; it was also foundational to crypto, having inspiredDogecoin, the first-ever meme coin.
āDoge is perhaps one of the most important memes of internet culture,ā Santiago Santos, a member of investment collective PleasrDAO, which purchased the Doge NFT,toldDecryptat the time.
PleasrDAO then proceeded to split the Doge NFT into billions offractionalized tokens, a move that generated hundreds of millions of dollars in value and has since fueled anentire ecosystemof Doge-loving crypto users.
On October 5, 2021, the original Pepe the Frog Genesis NFTācreated by Matt Furie, the artist behind the internet-famous green amphibian at one point co-opted by thealt rightāsold for a whopping 1,000 ETH, worth about $3.5 million at the time of sale.
Pepe, of course, does not only have cachet in general internet circles; the meme has long been deeply interwoven with crypto culture, and as recently as last year inspiredPepecoin, an Ethereum meme coin thatās seen major success.
Feels good man. Image: Matt Furie
ThePepe NFTrepresents the file of the first-ever comic panel drawn by Furie depicting the character, created in November 2006. It sold to Starry Night Capital, an NFT fundestablished by crypto hedge fund Three Arrows Capital and pseudonymous investorVincent Van Doughin 2021.
When Three Arrowscollapsedin 2022, the liquidator behind the firmās bankruptcy proceedings seized NFTs in its possession and beganselling them offto pay back creditors. Just this week, as part of that liquidation process, Sothebyās brokered a sale of the Pepe NFT to crypto executiveAndrew Kangfor an undisclosed sum.
One of early YouTubeās most iconic videos, Charlie Bit My Finger, made the move on-chain during the NFT craze of 2021. Why? The parents of the titular, then-teething Charlie and his older brother saw the success of other meme NFT sales, and hoped to turn their viral moment into funds that might cover both boysācollege tuitions.
The gambit worked quite effectively: On May 22, 2021, an NFT of the video sold for $760,999 to Dubai-based collector 3FMusic. At first, the family from the viral video planned to take the video off YouTube after the sale to increase the NFTās significance. 3FMusicreportedlysaid they didnāt care if the video remained online, and so it remains on YouTube to this day.
Nyan Cat, a pixelated animation of a cat with a Pop-Tart for a torso, first took the internet by storm in 2011. Ten years later, the imageās creator, artist Chris Torres, thought to sell the animation as an NFT. The piece would go on to garner far more interest than many expected, and effectively kicked off the concept of meme NFTs as an asset class.
On February 19, 2021ājust before NFTs permeated broadercultural consciousnessāTorres sold the Nyan Cat NFT for 300 ETH, then worth about $590,000, to an anonymous crypto user.
In the months that followed, numerous other creators of famous memes followed Torresā lead and began auctioning their own iconic images as NFTsāfinally allowing them to meaningfully profit off of, and take ownership over, the pieces of internet history they brought into existence.
āIt kind of became a trend, not just for me, but for many meme artists that created anything since then. Itās always been kind of a struggle,ā TorrestoldDecryptin 2021.
One of those first legendary meme creators to follow Torresā lead was Zoe Roth, who as a toddler posed in front a burning building with a subtle smirk thatās since become internet shorthand for taking pleasure in chaos. The meme, called Disaster Girl, was a foundational meme of the 2000s.
Disaster Girl. Image: Zoe Roth
In mid-2021, Roth auctioned an NFT of the original photo from the meme on Foundation. On April 17, itsoldfor 180 ETH, then worth roughly $430,000. The piece ended up with 3FMusic, the NFT collector who now owns several NFTs on this list.
Spring 2021 was the heyday for meme NFT auctions; in fact, every piece on this list besides the reigning champ (Dogwifhat) was sold in 2021, in the months following the seminal sale of Nyan Cat.
Just weeks after that NFT auction, Laina Morrisāthe content creator immortalized in a 2012 meme as āOverly Attached Girlfriendāātook the dive into blockchain tech herself, auctioning off an NFT of the photo from the meme on Foundation.
The sale went swimmingly, with Morrisnetting 200 ETH, worth $411,000 at the time, for the digital token. The piece went to NFT collector 3FMusic.
https://decrypt.co/223134/most-expensive-meme-nfts-ever-sold?amp=1