Adeyemi Matthew
Recently, Donald Trump previewed a “major announcement” of sorts, only to launch an NFT trading card collection priced at $99.
“America needs a superhero! I will be making a major
announcement,” he said in a video posted on his Truth Social platform.
However, the Former U.S. president Donald Trump said that he
decided to launch his NFT collection because he liked the art and thought the
images of him were “sort of cute.”
In a recent interview with One America News, the
twice-impeached former Commander in Chief and one-time television personality
said Trump Digital Trading Cards were not about making an investment, but
rather an artistic endeavor.
Trump launched NFT (non-fungible token) trading cards
earlier this month, teasing them beforehand as “a major announcement.” People
criticized the $99-apiece Polygon NFTs when they dropped, with many Trump
supporters saying that they wouldn’t buy them, and others finding watermarks
from stolen stock photos in the images.
"I loved the art,” Trump said in the interview. “I’m
looking at this stuff and I’m saying, ‘that’s sort of cute, that might sell.’
It set like a record. It’s been incredible.”
The digital trading cards were promoted as featuring
"amazing art of [Trump's] life and career," and depicted him as an
astronaut, a cowboy, and a superhero, among other poses and costumes.
When asked why he would choose to launch NFTs when the
entire crypto market was down, Trump said he “didn’t view it as an investment,”
but said again that he “thought they were cute.”
NFTs—tokens that are linked to digital (and sometimes
physical) things, like art or music—exploded last year. But since the crypto
market has entered a bear market, interest in the assets has waned.
Buyers were offered perks like a meet-and-greet or dinner
with the former leader. Trump’s NFT collection sold out in one day, but the
floor price has since dipped as people have lost interest in the tokens.
So far, the collection has raked in a total of $9.6 million
in secondary sales, according to CryptoSlam.
The Trump Family’s Relationship with Bitcoin and Crypto:
It's Complicated
Trump, who was president of the U.S. from 2017-2021,
announced in November that he would run again to be America’s leader in 2024.
This time last year, his wife Melania Trump released a
Solana NFT. Trump days later responded by praising his partner’s idea but
adding that crypto was a “very dangerous thing.”
