NFT Elements
Last updated
Last updated
The NFT firehose shows you exactly what trades are happening right now and it shows you in real time along with all the most relevant information about the trade. It shows you the NFT image, collection name, sale price and whether it was an accepted offer or a listing being bought. It shows you the buyer and the seller, what marketplace the trade took place on and how long ago.
There are a number of settings to choose from depending on what type of trading you generally focus on. Use the price filter to show trades only above a certain threshold, or toggle off some venues to focus on a single marketplace. The firehose is also great for keeping an eye on your favourite traders, filter by a list of addresses or a single trader.
The NFT price chart is a comprehensive window into NFT price action. You can use it as simply and stripped back as just tracking the floor price of an NFT, or as a complex and sophisticated technical analysis tool with all of the indicators.
The volume monitor default view shows the top 10 collections by volume for your chosen time period, you can choose to enable pagination in the settings which allows you to see page 2 and 3 (the next 20 collections by volume).
Chart volume by exchange
Chart transaction count by collection - for this view you must create a list of collections you want to track. As floor prices vary wildly between collections, it's useful to gauge interest using other metrics. 1 BAYC selling can account for a whole days volume of a collection with a lower floor price
Chart by mints - track which collections are minting out in real time
Track royalties by collection
The NFT trades element is similar to the firehose except it focuses on a single NFT collection. Pair it alongside your price chart to get a better feel for the flow of a collection and how it pairs with the price action.
The listings stream shows the latest NFT listings for the current collection you are looking at. It shows asking price, seller address, it has a link to view the listing and shows how long ago it was listed.
The holders table shows the top 50 holders of a project, with the option to load 50 more. It shows their current balance and their accumulation or disposal delta over the 1d, 7d and 30d timeframes.
If you click on an address, you will be shown a more granular view of their latest buys and sells as well as a chart showing their balance over time. Below are links to their Parsec address explore layout, Opensea profile and Etherscan, as well as their total portfolio value and top holding.
This element gives a visual representation of the distribution of a holder base, i.e. how many holders are currently holding 1, 2, 3 or more of the same collection.
The NFT collections table provides a high level overview of collection performance, volume and momentum against the broader market. By default it shows:
Collection image
Name
Floor price
Floor 1h change
Floor 1d change
Volume 1d
But there are many other columns that you can add, as well as the ability to filter by all metrics in the settings. Click a column to sort the table by it.
The portfolio element can be used to track any address or list of addresses. On first glance it shows the current:
Value of the wallets NFT holdings
Cost
Number of NFT's held
A treemap of holdings by weighting
A map of address activity
Click through the other tabs to see most recent trades, collection inflows and outflows of the wallet by timeframe, and recent mints.
Click on a collection in the collections tab to pull up the wallets holdings, as well as a chart showing where they bought and sold.
Browse through a collection using traits, price, rarity and recently sold as the filters. If you use 'price low to high', you'll be shown the lowest available listings and which marketplace they are listed on.
Click into a listing to see the #ID, all metadata, trades history, and links to current listings.
Use this element to compare floor prices amongst different collections, use the +
button to add more projects, otherwise you can head into the settings and add a list of NFTs.
The settings also contain metric adjustments, compare by floor
, max
, mean
or volume
. Change the moving average applied to the floor price (smoothing), and choose between a linear, logarithmic or absolute scale.
The holder flows element shows you which other collections the holders of your chosen collection have been buying and selling over your chosen timeframe.
The listings profile shows you how many listings there are at each price point for your given collection, by default it shows them grouped by marketplace. The yellow dotted line indicates the current floor price.
In the settings you can adjust it to show you a cumulative view and choose whether to look at number of listings, or size of ETH buying power needed to push the floor to a certain price point.