'Nyan Cat' GIF sells for $600K worth of ether and there's definitely no bubble

The digital artwork is a recreation of the 2011 flying rainbow-cat meme.
 By 
Jack Morse
 on 
'Nyan Cat' GIF sells for $600K worth of ether and there's definitely no bubble
Totally reasonable. Credit: NURPHOTO / GETTY

A digital cat just sold for an ungodly amount of cryptocurrency.

Nyan Cat, arguably 2011's hottest cat meme, is back in the news this week following the sale of a digital recreation of the artwork for 300 ether. At the time of the Friday sale, that was worth just under $600,000.

Welcome to the wild world of non-fungible tokens (NFTs), unique digital items authenticated on the blockchain, that are selling for upwards of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Artists are selling NFTs via digital marketplaces like Rarible and Foundation — the latter being where Nyan Cat's creator sold the latest iteration of his iconic cat.


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There's a reason this all sounds so familiar. Back in 2017, another type of digital feline took the cryptocurrency world by storm.

Cryptokitties, as the name might suggest, were cats on the Ethereum blockchain. At one point, the game of breeding, buying, selling, and hodling the cats because so popular that it actually bogged down the entire Ethereum network.

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But that was then.

These days, even the famed auction house Christie's is getting in on the action. An NFT auction, facilitated by the company, is set to take place less than a week after the Nyan Cat sale.

Notably, people are minting and selling all kinds of NFTs — like, for example, the "E. Honda gif" that New Yorker contributor and co-host of the CoinTalk podcast Jay Caspian Kang recently sold for over $500 in ether.

Yes, you read that correctly. Someone paid the equivalent of more than $500 in order to be able to prove, via the blockchain, that they own the "original" GIF of a Street Fighter character slapping an ass.

SEE ALSO: Someone paid $2.6 million in fees to move $134 worth of crypto and oops

Definitely no cryptocurrency bubble to see here.

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Jack Morse

Professionally paranoid. Covering privacy, security, and all things cryptocurrency and blockchain from San Francisco.

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