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How to Use NAKITH: Research NFT Games with Price, Video, and Search Signals

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Start researching NFT games with signals, not hype

The hardest part of researching an NFT game is not finding information. It is knowing which information deserves attention first.

Official sites show the strongest version of the project. Social feeds usually highlight the loudest moment. Token prices can move because of broader crypto market conditions, not because the game itself is improving.

NAKITH gives you a more practical starting point. It lets you compare token prices, YouTube activity, and search demand across NFT games so you can decide what is worth deeper research.

View the game list →

This guide explains how to use NAKITH, how to read each signal, and how to choose what to research next.


What NAKITH is for

NAKITH is not an automatic ranking of the best NFT games. It does not tell you what to buy, and it does not replace your own research.

Its job is simpler and more useful: it helps you decide which games are worth investigating next.

The dashboard brings three public-facing signals into one place:

  • Price: whether related tokens or assets are moving
  • YouTube: whether creators are still covering the game
  • Search demand: whether people are still looking up the title
The right mindset

Use NAKITH as a research filter. It is a way to choose your next question, not a way to skip due diligence.

About NAKITH →


The three signals to read first

NFT games are difficult to evaluate from a single number. Gameplay, token design, player retention, marketplace liquidity, and operator behavior can all matter at the same time.

That is why NAKITH puts several signals next to each other.

Price: read market reaction, not truth

Price is easy to see, but easy to overread.

A token can rise because of speculation, an exchange listing, a broader market rally, thin liquidity, or a short-term announcement. That does not automatically mean the game is healthier.

Use price to ask better questions:

  • Did the move happen suddenly?
  • Are YouTube and search activity moving in the same direction?
  • Is price the only signal that looks strong?

Price should be a starting point for investigation, not the conclusion.

YouTube: read exposure and creator activity

YouTube activity helps you see whether people are still making content about the game.

More videos may point to updates, events, earning narratives, controversy, or renewed community interest. Very little activity may suggest that creators and players have moved on.

NAKITH tracks activity volume. It does not judge video quality. If a title looks interesting, open the videos and check what people are actually saying.

Search demand: read sustained curiosity

Search demand is slower than social media, but it is useful because search is intentional. People search a game name when they want to understand it, verify it, start it, or compare it.

Look for direction, not just one monthly number:

  • Is interest declining?
  • Did a spike fade immediately?
  • Does search demand support the story shown by price or YouTube?

A practical workflow

Use NAKITH in this order:

  1. Start from the game list.
  2. Pick a title that catches your attention.
  3. Compare price, YouTube activity, and search demand together.
  4. Check whether one signal is unusually strong or weak.
  5. Read the game guide, official docs, marketplace information, and terms before spending money.

Choose what to research next

If you are new to NFT games, start with titles whose structure is easier to explain. That makes it easier to understand what the data is actually showing.

For example, the following angles can help you connect the dashboard signals with the actual game structure.

Upland

Upland is a virtual real estate NFT game tied to real-world map locations. It is a useful first research target because its major parts are relatively clear: UPX, property ownership, USD sales, beginner limits, and supply controls.

If you want to learn how to read an NFT game economy, Upland is a good place to start.

Sorare

Sorare is a fantasy sports-style service where player cards are used in competitions based on real-world sports performance. Before focusing on card prices, it is better to understand the sport, scoring rules, lineup decisions, and competition format.

Sorare is a useful starting point for understanding how NFT ownership can connect to actual gameplay.


Who NAKITH is useful for

NAKITH is useful if you want to:

  • do basic research before spending serious time or money
  • avoid judging a game from token price alone
  • compare market movement with creator activity and search demand
  • choose which game guide or official source to read next

It is not useful if you want a guaranteed list of games that will make money. NAKITH does not provide investment advice, earnings projections, or profit guarantees.


Next steps

Start from the game list, then open a guide or data page when a title looks worth deeper research.