NFT sales show minor drop to $65.5M, Ethereum sales plunge 24%

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NFT sales didn’t move much this week. Total volume slipped just a bit, down 0.47%, landing at about $65.6 million, which is almost the same as last week. So prices stayed flat — but what really stands out is participation.

More people are jumping back in.

The number of buyers jumped over 26%, and sellers climbed more than 24%. That tells us interest is coming back, even if the total money spent hasn’t exploded yet. Transactions stayed almost the same, showing steady activity across the market.

The big surprise this week came from Bitcoin NFTs.

DMarket, which runs on the Mythos blockchain, took the top spot with $5.32 million in sales. That’s a huge 72% increase from last week. Thousands of buyers and sellers were active, making it the busiest collection right now.

Right behind it was Courtyard on Polygon, pulling in nearly $5 million, up more than 66%. That’s a strong move and shows Polygon NFTs are gaining attention again.

But the real shocker?
Bitcoin BRC-20 NFTs exploded, jumping more than 300% to $3.45 million in sales. Bitcoin NFTs suddenly surged into third place, proving that Bitcoin’s NFT scene is heating up fast.

On the Ethereum side, CryptoPunks made a strong comeback, rising almost 69% to $2.51 million. Meanwhile, Milady Maker dropped hard, falling over 42%, showing how fast sentiment can flip in this market.

Looking at blockchains overall, Ethereum still holds the top spot with $20.88 million in sales — but that’s down nearly 24% from last week. Activity is still there, but money clearly rotated elsewhere.

Bitcoin moved into second place, jumping more than 70% to $12.12 million, driven mostly by BRC-20 NFTs. Buyer activity on Bitcoin also surged sharply.

BNB Chain slipped into third with $7.77 million, down almost 19%, while Polygon jumped over 44%, showing strong recovery momentum.

Mythos Chain also stood out, climbing more than 72%, while Solana saw sales drop over 23%, even though buyer numbers increased. That tells us people are browsing and buying cheaper items, but not spending big yet.

At the top end of sales, Bitcoin NFTs dominated. Two BRC-20 NFTs sold for nearly $2 million each, while a Bitcoin domain and a couple of high-value CryptoPunks rounded out the biggest deals of the week.

So overall, the message is clear:

NFT prices are calm, but people are coming back.
Bitcoin NFTs are gaining serious momentum.
And while Ethereum still leads, the spotlight is clearly shifting.

This market isn’t dead — it’s warming up again, just quietly.