For NFTs that can become blue-chips, I should analyze them from 4 dimensions, namely: founding team, artistic style, community culture construction, NFT quantity and price.
- The ability of the founding team determines the upper limit of the project. Investment is the investment team. A team with experienced project experience, strong technology, and perfect marketing configuration can create greater value than a team composed of two business players.
- The art style of NFT is also very important. Although NFT works are very abstract, at first glance, NFT brings you the feeling of warm sunshine, mystery and depth, sci-fi future, or dirty fear. This is a very important judgment. Standard, human perception of beauty is common, and your feelings often also represent whether NFT works can be accepted by the public.
- Community culture construction, the community construction here refers not only to the number of Twitter followers and Discord group users, but the community to form its own unique cultural atmosphere, enter a community, project development, collectors, out of circle marketing events, Celebrities join the social effects. can be used as a criterion for judging whether a community is of high quality.
- Finally, the number and price of NFTs. At present, the number of NFTs sold for a project is usually between 5,000 and 10,000, and the price is between 0.0X-0.1ETH. Except for a few projects with very high-quality fundamentals, there are very few projects. The launch price of the project will be more than 1 ETH. If the fundamentals of a project are not very good, but tens of thousands of NFTs have been sold, it is necessary to be very cautious when seeing such projects.
Through the above five dimensions, I recommend everyone to pay attention to the Batman series "Bat Cowl" launched by the American animation giant DC. I think it has the potential to become the next blue-chip. Of course I am a big fan of DC myself and like Batman very much. It's like Batman's line in the movie: "I wear a mask. not to hide who I am — but to create what I am."