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LINK, PENGU, ICP lead NFT social engagement rankings with millions of interactions

Social Activity Spikes Across NFT Projects

Today’s data shows something interesting happening in the NFT space. Social engagement metrics have jumped noticeably across several projects. According to numbers from Phoenix Group and LunarCrush, we’re seeing thousands of posts and millions of interactions concentrated around specific NFT ecosystems.

I think what’s happening here is that community conversations are picking up steam again. Maybe it’s seasonal, or perhaps there’s something specific driving this activity. The numbers tell a story of renewed interest, or at least, more people talking about these projects online.

Top Performers Show Significant Engagement

LINK appears to be leading the pack with what I’d call substantial numbers. They recorded 10.4 thousand engaged posts in a single day. That’s not nothing. The interactions reached 3.3 million, which includes all the usual social media actions – likes, retweets, comments, that sort of thing.

PENGU comes in second, which is interesting because it’s a meme-based project. They had 8.4 thousand posts and 1.2 million interactions. The gap between first and second place is pretty wide, but PENGU’s numbers still suggest a strong community presence.

ICP takes third position with 6.5 thousand posts and 474.4 thousand interactions. Their numbers are lower than the top two, but they’re still significant. It shows that different types of NFT projects can maintain active communities, even if the engagement levels vary.

Mid-Tier Projects Holding Steady

What I find perhaps more telling is the middle section of the rankings. ROSE, DGB, and XTZ all show consistent, steady engagement. They’re not breaking records, but they’re maintaining activity levels that suggest ongoing community interest.

ROSE had 3.2 thousand posts with 209.5 thousand interactions. DGB was close behind with 3.1 thousand posts and 131.3 thousand interactions. XTZ posted 2.9 thousand times with 206.8 thousand interactions.

These numbers aren’t explosive, but they’re not negligible either. They represent communities that are still talking, still engaging, still present in the conversation.

Established Names and Gaming Assets Remain Relevant

Further down the list, we see familiar names like APE with 2.8 thousand posts and 268.2 thousand interactions. That’s interesting because APE has been around for a while now. The fact that it’s still generating this level of conversation suggests that established NFT brands maintain cultural relevance.

FET and VRA also appear, with 2.1 thousand posts/132.1 thousand interactions and 1.7 thousand posts/126.1 thousand interactions respectively. These projects, particularly VRA with its gaming focus, show that different NFT categories continue to have dedicated audiences.

STX rounds out the top ten with 1.6 thousand posts and 105.3 thousand interactions. Even at the bottom of this particular ranking, we’re still talking about thousands of posts and hundreds of thousands of interactions.

What This Might Mean

Looking at all this data together, I’m noticing a few things. First, the NFT space isn’t monolithic – different types of projects attract different levels and types of engagement. Second, social activity doesn’t always correlate directly with market performance, but it does indicate community health.

Maybe the most important takeaway is that multiple NFT ecosystems can coexist with active communities. The leaderboard shows variety rather than concentration. LINK dominates in terms of raw numbers, but other projects maintain meaningful engagement levels.

Market participants often watch these social signals because high activity can sometimes precede increased trading volume. But I’d be cautious about drawing direct causal relationships. Social engagement is one indicator among many.

What’s clear is that people are still talking about NFTs, still engaging with these communities, and still participating in conversations across multiple platforms. The numbers suggest a space that’s active, diverse, and perhaps more resilient than some critics might assume.

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