The Nightly Mint: Daily NFT Recap 2022-05-18

Are we… are we in an NFT bear market? It’s been a cool temperature of NFT seasonality without question. What lies ahead? It’s likely that NFTs aren’t about to disappear overnight, but the madness over late last year going into the beginning of the year will take some time to build up to again.

In the meantime, we’ll keep you updated with all the latest happenings – which today include Robinhood’s intent to offer NFT support and the rising scene around Solana.

The Nightly Mint

Latest Mint: Robinhood NFT Support

Robinhood isn’t exactly a crypto golden child. If anything, it’s been far from the opposite. However, the trading platform is suggesting that NFT support could be included in the firm’s upcoming non-custodial wallet, which reportedly is approaching 2M sign-ups for it’s waiting list. It’s been a long push and pull for Robinhood and crypto, but was by-and-large a major consumer on-boarding for those newer to the space. We’ll see if the same remains true here.

Related Reading | Cardano (ADA) Could Slide Back To $0.40 – But $0.68 Still Doable

Solana NFTs have been booming lately. | Source: SOL-USD on TradingView.com

In The Midst Of Quietness, Solana Has Been Shining

Despite a middling market at large, the chatter around the NFT community over recent days has undoubtedly had a highlight on Solana, courtesy of projects like Okay Bears which seem to have that “taking over” sort of feel. It’s literally been dubbed “Solana Summer.”

The ‘Minty Fresh’ Take

If you haven’t been through a crypto bear market, you could certainly be experiencing one now – or maybe the beginning of one. We won’t pretend to know what tomorrow holds. But we don’t see too much fundamental difference around the NFT landscape that exists today relative to 6 months ago in the market.

Related Reading | This Analyst Believes Ethereum May Lose 80% Of Its Value

Featured image from Pexels, Charts from TradingView.com
The writer of this content is not associated or affiliated with any of the parties mentioned in this article. This is not financial advice.
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