Over the years, most crypto sectors have seen strong capital inflows, while one has lagged.
Looking at the data, whether it’s Real World Assets (RWA), stablecoins, or emerging AI agents, all have seen major capital rotation, with triple-digit growth in under half a decade. NFTs, however, have struggled, with market cap still far below the $15 billion+ levels seen in the 2021–2022 cycle.
That said, April has started to shift sentiment. As the chart below highlights, total $NFT market capitalization has surged 54% over the past month, bringing the combined market cap of $NFT [Non Fungible Tokens] projects back above the $2 billion level for the first time since early Q1.
Unsurprisingly, traders are split on the market reaction.
On one side, supporters see this as renewed momentum for a sector that’s been underperforming for a while, pointing to it as a sign of renewed capital flowing back into crypto. On the other hand, skeptics are quick to zoom out and compare it to the 2021-2022 cycle, pointing out that the current move still looks relatively muted, even within the 2024-2026 range.
Backing this skepticism, critics point out how concentrated the move is. Most of the gains come from blue-chip collections, especially Bored Apes, rather than a broad-based recovery across the market. Naturally, this raises the question: Are these flows into NFTs a bullish bet or just a temporary boost?
$TON blockchain $NFT volume leads the market
Looking at $NFT trading volume toward the end of the Q1 cycle, calling it a temporary spike might be too early.
From a technical standpoint, there’s a clear divergence forming between major chains like Ethereum [ETH] and Toncoin [$TON], highlighting how uneven $NFT activity has become across ecosystems.
As the chart shows, in March, $TON led $NFT trading volume at $39.8 million, ahead of Ethereum’s $35.9 million, marking a noticeable shift in where $NFT activity concentrates. Breaking it down further, most of $TON’s volume came from Telegram-native NFTs. Telegram Gifts drove $23.09 million (58% of total volume), followed by Telegram Numbers at $11.02 million (27.5%) and Telegram Usernames at $5.28 million (13%).
Against this backdrop, calling the $NFT market spike too concentrated feels a bit overstated.
The logic is simple: Trading volume is shifting away from Ethereum dominance and spreading across other chains, so capital now rotates more broadly instead of staying locked into one network. Technically, this surge in $NFT volume has also moved in line with the broader upside in the total crypto market in March.
Taken together, the current structure therefore looks less like an isolated spike and more like a distributed rotation, with the $NFT market moving back above $2 billion acting as a strong signal of traders stepping in more aggressively. As a result, this positions NFTs as a key signal for tracking capital flows this cycle.
Final Summary
- $NFT market cap rebounded above $2 billion with a 54% monthly surge, signaling renewed trader participation.
- Volume is shifting across chains, suggesting a more distributed $NFT recovery rather than an Ethereum-only spike.
beincrypto.com
coindesk.com