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Just spent some time digging through NFT history and honestly, the numbers are wild. Pak's The Merge still sits at the top as the highest NFT sold ever—$91.8 million back in December 2021. What's interesting about this one is that it wasn't a single buyer situation. Instead, 28,893 collectors pooled together, each buying different quantities at $575 per unit. Pretty unique approach to what became the highest NFT sold in history.
Beeple's been a major player in this space too. His Everydays: The First 5000 Days went for $69 million at Christie's in March 2021. Started at just $100 in the auction, then the bidding went absolutely crazy. The piece itself is a collage of 5,000 individual artworks created over 5,000 consecutive days starting in 2007. That's commitment.
Then there's The Clock, another Pak creation done with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. This one sold for $52.7 million in February 2022. It's a dynamic piece with a timer tracking Assange's imprisonment days, updating automatically. AssangeDAO—a group of over 100,000 supporters—pooled resources to buy it. The proceeds went toward his legal defense. That's when you see NFTs becoming more than just art, you know?
Beeple also created HUMAN ONE, which Christie's sold for $29 million in November 2021. It's this massive kinetic sculpture, over 7 feet tall, with a figure in silver clothing and a space helmet. The background is a dystopian landscape projected on four walls that constantly changes. What's cool is that Beeple can remotely update it, so it's literally a living artwork that evolves over time.
Now, CryptoPunks have been absolutely dominating the expensive NFT rankings. CryptoPunk #5822 went for $23 million—it's one of only nine alien-themed punks in the series. Then #7523 sold for $11.75 million at Sotheby's in June 2021, notable for being the only alien punk wearing a medical mask. More recently, #7804 hit $16.42 million in March 2024, and #3100 reached $16.03 million just days before that. These aren't just collectibles; they're pieces of early NFT history.
TPunk #3442 is another interesting case. Tron CEO Justin Sun bought it for 120 million TRX (about $10.5 million) in August 2021. This one's known as 'The Joker' because it resembles Batman's villain. It's actually the most expensive NFT ever sold on the Tron blockchain.
Beyond individual pieces, the highest NFT sold collections by total volume are Axie Infinity at $4.27 billion and Bored Ape Yacht Club at $3.16 billion. These numbers show how massive the market got.
XCOPY's 'Right-click and Save As Guy' sold for $7 million to collector Cozomo de' Medici. The title itself is a commentary on how people misunderstand NFTs—thinking you can just right-click and download them. Originally sold for 1 ETH (about $90) back in 2018.
Dmitri Cherniak's Ringers #109 from the Art Blocks platform hit $6.93 million, making it the most expensive NFT on that platform. The entire Ringers series contains 1,000 generative art pieces, and even the cheapest ones now cost around $88,000.
Looking at all this, it's clear that the highest NFT sold records keep getting set by pieces with either incredible scarcity, strong artist reputation, or some kind of cultural significance. Whether it's Pak's innovative sales model, Beeple's consistent output, or the rarity of certain CryptoPunks—there's always a story behind the price tag. The market's definitely cooled from those 2021-2022 peaks, but these records still stand as milestones in digital art history.