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2022 in Review: the Top Five NFT Drops of the Year

Though prices and trading volumes declined across the board, 2022 was another big year for NFTs.

2022 in Review: the Top Five NFT Drops of the Year
Cover artwork: Moonbirds, goblintown.wtf, Memories of Qilin (edited by Mariia Kozyr)

Key Takeaways

  • The NFT market experienced a slump with the rest of crypto in 2022, but some collections stood out from the pack.
  • Yuga Labs' Otherside mint raised a record-breaking $310 million in April.
  • Generative artists like Emily Xie and Tyler Hobbs helped push the scene forward.

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Several NFT collections stood out from the pack against adverse conditions as the market returned to earth this year. 

The Best NFT Drops of 2022 

At this point, few people need reminding that NFTs had a pretty big 2021. Still, it would be impossible to talk about the state of the nascent space in 2022 without first acknowledging the technology’s boom during the last crypto bull run. 

Mania hit the NFT market last year after that Beeple sale at Christie’s, to the point where new Bored Ape Yacht Club-inspired avatar collections were dropping daily, digital rocks were selling for millions, and now-defunct hedge funds were dropping seven figures on generative art JPEGs. 

In 2022, the market was far more subdued as crypto entered what some are describing as its harshest winter yet. Prices for many once sought-after JPEGs tumbled while trading volumes on every major marketplace declined. 

But despite the harsh climate, several new developments gave NFT believers renewed hope that there may be life to this thing after all. OpenSea, one of the big winners of last year’s boom, saw a host of promising new competitors enter the space, though none have yet stolen its crown. The world’s biggest social media company, Meta, rolled out support for what it’s calling “digital collectibles” on Instagram, and Reddit onboarded three million new users through its collectible avatar sale. 

With less noise clogging up social feeds and only the diehards remaining, the best NFT collections of the year had an easier time standing out from the pack. To kick off our 2022 in Review series, we picked out five of our favorite drops that made a big impact on the space over the year. In 2022, the market flocked to the most hyped avatar mints, generative art had a strong run, and Yuga Labs proved that Bored Ape mania still has life yet. 

Memories of QilinEmily Xie 

Emily Xie is an Asian-American generative artist based in New York. Alongside names like Ben Kovach, Tyler Hobbs, and William Mapan, she’s part of a tight-knit scene that’s pushing the boundaries of digital art with code. 

Xie was a key figure in the generative art space before NFTs took off, but her profile rose in 2022 after the release of Memories of Qilin, this year’s standout Art Blocks collection. Memories of Qilin depicts Xie’s singular style by giving a nod to traditional East Asian painting, and like many other top-tier generative art collections, it feels like the kind of thing that could have been painted by hand. 

Emily Xies Memories of Qilin is one of the most sought-after Art Blocks NFT collections. (Source: Memories of Qilin/Art Blocks)

Xie created the collection using techniques like masking and geometric design in p5.js,  for 1,024 striking outputs that evoke lifelike images. Memories of Qilin explores folklore; it takes its name from a unicorn-like beast that appears in Chinese mythology. 

Memories of Qilin launched as the market trended down in March and was initially overlooked outside of the relatively niche generative art scene. However, the floor price later jumped and has held strong as interest in NFTs wanes. 

Trading activity on Memories of Qilin and other collections like it shows that the NFT market has become more fragmented, and those who are drawn to generative art are rarely the same as those looking to flip avatars for profits. Memories of Qilin fans are closer to traditional art collectors, which makes perfect sense; this is the kind of art that wouldn’t look out of place on the wall of a real-world home or gallery. CW

Moonbirds 

Moonbirds, a collection of 10,000 pixel art owl avatars from art collective PROOF, hit the Ethereum blockchain in April. Straight out of the door, the collection received criticism for its hefty price tag, charging a whopping 2.5 ETH (around $7,600 at the time). 

Launching off the success of PROOF’s earlier NFT passes, which gave holders exclusive access to limited pieces by top crypto and NFT artists, the hype surrounding Moonbirds was extreme. Even at a $7,600 mint price, the demand far outweighed the collection’s 7,875 public supply (2,125 NFTs were reserved for PROOF Collective holders and the PROOF team). 

Moonbird #2642 sold to The Sandbox for 350 ETH shortly after the collection’s launch. It’s the highest value secondary sale of a Moonbird NFT to date. (Source: Moonbirds)

In an attempt to make the allocation process fair, the PROOF team ran a raffle to decide who would be able to mint, with hopefuls required to submit a wallet containing 2.5 ETH to get a shot at minting. Once all the entries were in, the team revealed it had received about four entries into the allowlist raffle for every NFT available. Although the PROOF team took measures to prevent the drop from being Sybil attacked, some cheaters got through multiple times. 

Moonbirds stood out from other hyped collections this year in how easy it was for minters to make life-changing money in a short space of time. At their peak, floor price Moonbirds were selling for over 30 ETH, representing a 1,100% return on the 2.5 ETH mint price. Of course, as crypto winter set in, Moonbirds slowly bled on the secondary market as interest in NFTs faded. They currently trade at a floor price of 7.3 ETH and remain sought-after alongside other avatar collections like Doodles, Azuki, and Bored Ape Yacht Club. TC

Otherdeeds NFT Plots for Otherside 

Yuga Labs didn’t set a foot wrong in 2021, and the Bored Ape Yacht Club creator appeared set on continuing its winning streak this year. A landmark acquisition of Larva Labs’ CryptoPunks and Meebits collections and the massive ApeCoin airdrop meant that Bored Ape fever was still running strong at the start of the year, but the hype peaked with the launch of Otherside, Yuga’s long-promised Metaverse world. 

Otherside kicked off with a highly anticipated mint for plots of virtual land called Otherdeeds in April, and the sale became such a big talking point that it had regular crypto followers queuing up for a place alongside the usual NFT suspects. In the end, demand for the 55,000 digital land plots was so high that gas prices skyrocketed to thousands of dollars, leading Yuga to come out with a statement blaming the botched launch on Ethereum. Yuga raked in over $310 million worth of ApeCoin once the dust had settled, making the drop the most lucrative in NFT history. 

Otherdeeds NFTs featuring a Mega Koda character are some of Othersides most valuable land plots. (Source: Otherside)

Despite the shaky start, as with every big drop like this, there was a buzz surrounding the Otherdeeds NFTs in the days following the reveal. The 10,000 plots featuring “Kodas” and the much rarer “Mega Kodas,” unique alien-like characters that are set to play a starring role in Otherside, soared on the secondary market, though prices have since cooled as crypto winter prevails. 

Barring a demo run, Yuga has stayed tight-lipped on how Otherside will look when it’s complete. While Otherdeeds have been trending down since the mint, the collection is one of the most traded on the market with a staggering 358,000 ETH worth of volume on OpenSea alone. Time will tell whether demand for Otherdeeds will return, but it will likely need Metaverse hype and a killer product to break new highs. Still, with Yuga at the helm and one of the NFT space’s most passionate communities, it has as good a chance as any at dominating once the market picks up. CW

goblintown.wtf 

Even in the depths of a bear market, NFT collections can come out of left field and surprise the market. No collection has proved this better than goblintown.wtf.

goblintown.wtf consists of 9,999 ugly goblin avatars launched as a free stealth mint on May 21. The collection initially stayed relatively under the radar, but interest soon started to grow due to the mystery surrounding the project. At the time, all onlookers could deduce was that the NFTs were a reference to “Goblintown”—a term crypto natives use to refer to bearish conditions in the digital assets space. Details such as the project’s creators, future plans, or what the NFT might be used for were completely absent. 

“Crustybutt da gobblin king” sold for 69.42 ETH in May. (Source: goblintown.wtf)

Whenever there’s a mystery, it lets imaginations run wild, and in this respect, goblintown.wtf was no exception. Many crypto community members theorized the collection could have ties to Board Ape Yacht Club creator Yuga Labs due to a reference to goblins in a leaked pitch deck from the company. Others noticed the art style, as well as goblin voices from an enigmatic Twitter spaces call, were reminiscent of Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butthead, fueling speculation that he was at least partly responsible. 

As the excitement and speculation grew, so did the prices of the goblin NFTs on the secondary market. At peak mania, goblins traded hands for as much as 10 ETH, almost $20,000 at the time. One rarer piece from the collection, dubbed “Crustybutt da gobblin king,” sold for 69.42 ETH and remains the highest value secondary sale for the collection to date. TC

QQLTyler Hobbs and Dandelion Wist 

Tyler Hobbs is best known as the creator of Fidenza, the world’s most important generative art NFT collection to date. The U.S. artist has dropped a few works since his magnum opus exploded in popularity at the height of NFT mania in 2021, but QQL is the one that could have the biggest impact for years to come. 

Created in collaboration with Archipelago co-founder and generative art collector Dandelion Wist, QQL is best described as a collaborative experiment that invites the collector to become the creator. Through the project’s website interface, fans can explore the QQL algorithm by toying with a range of settings to create their own outputs. Those holding a mint pass can add an output to the collection, either by picking out a favorite from their own archive or acquiring someone else’s QQL seed. 

QQL shares some similarities with Tyler Hobbs Fidenza. (Source: QQL)

The collection’s collaborative nature means that co-creators can hold out to mint their best work, and the depth of the algorithm makes for surprising variety across each piece. At its core, QQL features distinctive ring shapes in a variety of colorful palettes akin to Fidenza, but the algorithm is much richer and more complex than the one that put Hobbs on the map. 

999 QQL mint passes sold at 14 ETH in a Dutch auction in September, proving that the NFT market is still alive despite activity declining across the board. Only 150 of the passes have been redeemed at press time, hinting that collectors are planning to hold for the long haul. If generative art is to take off and Hobbs remains at its forefront in the future, QQL could be an important collection in its storyeven if it could be decades until it’s complete. CW

Disclosure: At the time of writing, some authors of this feature held some Otherside NFTs, a QQL mint pass, ETH, and several other crypto assets. 

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