NFTs
Analyze NFT ecosystem trends with easy to use schemas.
Our NFT schemas includes mints, trades and trades_with.
NFT trades provide aggregate and marketplace-specific trades from indexed marketplaces and protocols. The majority of these tables are included in
ethereum.nfts.trades
The NFT trades table includes the following coverage on top of basic trades data:
- 1.Marketplace Aggregators
- NFT trades routed via Gem and Genie are labeled in all trade-related tables, enabling easy aggregator-level analytics.
- 2.NFT AMMs:
- Swaps via Sudoswap and details about the NFTs involved, all rolled up into an easy-to-use table.
- 3.OTCs NFT:
- NFT Trader p2p OTC NFT swaps.
What is the difference between an NFT marketplace and a protocol?
- An NFT marketplace is a platform for users to buy, sell or trade their NFTs. Examples of NFT marketplace include OpenSea, Rarible, LooksRare, and X2Y2.
- An NFT marketplace protocol is the underlying smart contract and framework facilitating the sales and trades of NFTs in the marketplace.
- A marketplace can upgrade or change its underlying protocol over time. One example is OpenSea upgrading from Wyvern to Seaport protocol.
- Additionally, new or existing NFT marketplaces can choose to fork existing protocols for their platform.
NFT mints table provides enriched data on on-chain NFT mints.
The aggregated mints table contains standard and contract-specific mints (e.g. Seadrop, NewCloneTicker, etc) enriched with minting currency and cost in USD denomination. Non-ETH mints are also indexed in our current model.
Mints associated with a particular platform (e.g. fair.xyz, zora, opensea) are labeled whenever possible.
Identify meaningful NFT transaction volumes. Our curated
w_flags
model for trades and mints allows analysts to filter out inorganic NFT volumes contributed by wash trades, defi-related mints, and delisted volumes. Last modified 1mo ago