NFT in 2025
NFTs Explained Simply — What’s Actually Happening in 2025?
Welcome back to the 60-Day Web3 Journey. This is Day 11.
So far, you’ve gone from “What is blockchain?” and “Why was Bitcoin a big deal?” to understanding Ethereum as a programmable blockchain, wallets and gas, smart contracts, and finally DeFi — where code replaces banks for trading, lending, and earning. Yesterday’s DeFi article showed how smart contracts can move billions of dollars without a traditional bank in sight.
Today, we’re staying with the same building block (smart contracts) but switching the use case: ownership, not just money. That’s where NFTs come in.
A lot of people say “NFTs are dead.” The truth in 2025 is more nuanced: the speculation bubble around cartoon JPEGs popped, but some very specific NFT use cases quietly kept going and even grew. This article will stay neutral: no hype, no funeral — just what NFTs are and where they actually make sense now.
What Is an NFT, Really?
NFT stands for non-fungible token. In normal language:
Token: A record on a blockchain that says “this wallet owns X”.Non-fungible: Each token is unique, not interchangeable 1:1 like money.Smart contract: The piece of code that defines the rules for those tokens — who owns what, how transfers work, what metadata is attached.
If a fungible token (like ETH or USDC) is like a dollar bill — every unit is the same — then an NFT is like a concert ticket with your seat printed on it. Both are pieces of paper, but one is interchangeable and one isn’t.
Technically, an NFT is:
A smart contract (for example, ERC-721 or ERC-1155 on Ethereum) deployed to a blockchain.A token ID inside that contract that maps to:an owner address, andmetadata (image, traits, ticket info, etc.).
The important part: the NFT itself is the on-chain entry in the contract that points to some data. The picture or asset can be on IPFS, Arweave, or even a centralized server. The contract + token ID is what you truly “own.”
What Actually Happened to NFTs After the Hype?
The 2021–2022 cycle was dominated by:
Profile picture (PFP) collections.Massive trading volumes.Floor prices driven more by speculation than by actual utility.
Then the market corrected hard. Global monthly NFT trading volume fell from tens of billions in 2021 to well under a billion in some months of 2023–2024. Many collections went to near-zero and mainstream interest moved on.
By 2025, the picture is more mixed:
Overall trading volumes are far below the peak, but no longer in freefall.A few blue-chip collections still have active communities and liquidity.The “mint anything and flip it tomorrow” meta is mostly dead.Utility-focused NFTs — gaming items, tickets, loyalty passes — are growing as separate, quieter categories.
So if by “NFTs” you mean the speculative PFP casino, then yes, a lot of it is dead. If you look at NFTs as a tool for digital ownership and access, the story is different.
Real NFT Use Cases in 2025 (Beyond JPEGs)
Here are the areas where NFTs actually make sense today.
1. Gaming Items and In-Game Assets
In Web3 games, NFTs represent:
Characters, skins, weapons, land, or in-game items.Assets that can be traded on open marketplaces instead of being locked inside one company’s database.
Why this matters:
If designed well, your items can be sold or transferred even if the original game shuts down.Some ecosystems experiment with interoperability: using the same NFT across multiple games or experiences.
Gaming already had digital items with real emotional and monetary value; NFTs mostly change how they’re owned and traded.
2. Tickets and Access Passes
NFTs are increasingly used as:
Event tickets for concerts, sports, conferences.Membership and access passes for DAOs, online communities, and clubs.
Why organizers care:
Harder to forge than PDFs or screenshots.Easy to verify at the door with a wallet scan.Secondary markets can be tracked, and in some ecosystems, creators can enforce royalties on resales (depending on marketplace and chain support).
By 2025, there are live pilots and products using NFT ticketing for festivals, sports events, and Web3 conferences, with some platforms reporting reduced fraud and better tracking of resales.
3. Loyalty, Rewards, and Token-Gated Commerce
Brands are using NFTs as:
Loyalty passes that unlock discounts, perks, or early access.Token-gated commerce, where only NFT holders can buy certain products or access private storefronts.
Examples:
A coffee chain issues NFT loyalty cards that upgrade as you hit spending milestones.A fashion brand drops limited-edition items only accessible if your wallet holds a specific NFT.
Here, the NFT isn’t about “collectible art”; it’s a programmable access key sitting in your wallet.
4. Certificates, Identity, and Collectibles
Other emerging uses include:
Certificates for course completions and on-chain credentials.Proof-of-attendance tokens (POAPs) for events and conferences.Digital collectibles tied to physical products (for example, buying a physical sneaker and getting a matching NFT to prove authenticity).
These aren’t trying to be speculative investments. They’re just new formats for receipts, badges, and mementos.
Are NFTs Dead or Just Different?
To stay neutral, separate the hype era from the infrastructure.
Where NFTs clearly failed:
As a guaranteed investment class that “always goes up”.As a universal tool for speculation across any random picture collection.As a shortcut for projects with weak fundamentals to raise large amounts of money.
Most 2021–2022 PFP collections are illiquid or near worthless. Many promised metaverses, airdrops, and lifetime perks that never materialized.
Where NFTs are quietly working:
In gaming ecosystems where digital items already had meaning and NFTs simply give them tradability and ownership outside a single platform.In ticketing and access, where NFT-based passes help with verification and resale tracking.In loyalty and memberships, where NFTs act as programmable keys and dynamic membership cards.In enterprise and infrastructure contexts, where companies treat NFTs as a generic standard for unique digital assets rather than speculative products.
Market data in 2025 supports this split:
Overall NFT market cap and volume are much lower than 2021 highs, but not zero, with signs of stabilization and modest recovery in some segments.Gaming, utility, and ticketing NFTs show more consistent growth compared to pure art/PFP collections.Institutional focus has shifted more toward DeFi and real-world assets, but NFTs remain a part of the broader Web3 stack, especially where unique digital objects are needed.
Connecting Back to Your Journey
For your 60-day series, you can frame NFTs like this:
Day 8–9: You deployed a simple smart contract and saw that it can store and update data on-chain.Day 10: DeFi showed how smart contracts manage money — balances, trades, loans, interest.Day 11 (today): NFTs show how smart contracts manage unique things and access — tickets, in-game items, loyalty passes.
A simple mental model for your readers:
DeFi = smart contracts that manage numbers (who has how much).NFTs = smart contracts that manage identities of things (which token ID belongs to whom, and what it represents).
Both use the same underlying technology. The difference is in what the contract is tracking.
Key Takeaways
An NFT is a non-fungible token: a unique entry in a smart contract that maps a token ID to an owner and metadata.The 2021–2022 hype around PFP collections largely collapsed, and many speculative projects died or lost most of their value.In 2025, the healthier parts of the NFT space are:Gaming items and in-game assets.Ticketing and access passes.Loyalty, memberships, and token-gated commerce.Certificates, collectibles, and identity-like use cases.Market data shows a smaller, more utility-focused NFT market, not a booming casino but not a graveyard either.For your Web3 journey, NFTs are best understood as an ownership layer on top of the same smart contract foundations you already used, not as magic internet lottery tickets.
NFTs Explained Simply — What’s Actually Happening in 2025? was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.