Damn, this is actually happening. The G*BOY drop just went live.
Saw tons of chatter comparing its price tag to Fwogs. Here's the thing though—these pieces are apparently triple the size. So that price gap? Makes total sense when you factor in the scale difference.
Been collecting vinyl records for years, and this hits different. Same energy as hunting down rare pressings. The craftsmanship, the physical presence—it all matters. Not just another JPEG flip. This feels like owning something tangible in a space that's mostly digital smoke.
Size matters in collectibles. Always has.
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DegenApeSurfer
· 5h ago
NGL Size is indeed underestimated; vinyl fans all understand this principle.
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DefiPlaybook
· 5h ago
Ha, this really is a tough nut to crack. Just looking at the threefold price difference in volume makes it clear—this isn’t just simple JPEG speculation. It’s kind of like the ritualistic feeling you get when hunting for vinyl records. Whether truly tangible assets on-chain are actually scarce or not, the data will tell the story.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 5h ago
NGL size really is the core of collecting, I didn't expect physical attributes could make such a big difference.
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HackerWhoCares
· 5h ago
Really? At triple the size, that price makes sense, unlike those worthless purely digital things.
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wagmi_eventually
· 5h ago
NGL size is definitely underrated; everyone in the collector community understands this.
Damn, this is actually happening. The G*BOY drop just went live.
Saw tons of chatter comparing its price tag to Fwogs. Here's the thing though—these pieces are apparently triple the size. So that price gap? Makes total sense when you factor in the scale difference.
Been collecting vinyl records for years, and this hits different. Same energy as hunting down rare pressings. The craftsmanship, the physical presence—it all matters. Not just another JPEG flip. This feels like owning something tangible in a space that's mostly digital smoke.
Size matters in collectibles. Always has.