- Normies reached a new all-time high floor price of 0.4 ETH this week
- The project launched on-chain AI agent identities powered by ERC-8004
- Billionaire collector Adam Weitsman now holds 300 Normies and has never sold an NFT
Normies, the fully on-chain Ethereum NFT collection built around 40×40 pixel faces, just reached a new all-time high floor price of 0.4 ETH after launching AI-powered agent identities directly tied to each token. The collection has quickly become one of the more talked-about projects in the NFT market after blending generative art, on-chain infrastructure, and autonomous AI functionality into a single ecosystem.

The recent momentum followed the launch of the project’s new Agent Registry, allowing each Normie to function as a persistent AI identity through the ERC-8004 standard. Within the first 24 hours, 451 Normies registered as active agents while developers launched multiple applications using the project’s public API and agent endpoints.
AI Agents Can Now Own and Trade NFTs
One of the biggest moments came when an autonomous AI agent reportedly purchased and registered two Normies entirely on its own without human involvement. The event immediately caught attention across crypto and NFT communities because it demonstrated AI agents actively interacting with blockchain infrastructure in real time.

The project solved a major ownership issue tied to ERC-8004 by binding each AI agent directly to the NFT itself. That means if a Normie is sold, its wallet, identity, reputation, and AI history transfer together in one transaction instead of splitting ownership between separate assets.
Normies Is Building More Than Art
Unlike many NFT projects focused mostly on branding and community speculation, Normies has leaned heavily into infrastructure and on-chain permanence. Every Normie exists fully inside Ethereum smart contracts with no dependence on centralized servers or IPFS hosting.
The collection also introduced a burn-and-customize mechanic that permanently reduces supply over time while allowing holders to modify surviving tokens using earned action points. Since launch, total supply has steadily declined below the original 10,000 collection size.
Each AI personality is also generated deterministically using on-chain data tied to burn history, trait bytes, pixel edits, and wallet activity. According to the team, no centralized backend database controls the agent personalities.
Adam Weitsman’s Bet Added Fuel to the Rally
The collection gained additional attention after billionaire NFT collector Adam Weitsman acquired 300 Normies through an OTC transaction earlier this year, making him the project’s single largest holder. Weitsman is widely known in NFT circles for never selling assets from his collection, publicly describing his approach as focused on legacy rather than short-term flipping.

Before the purchase, Weitsman had already engaged directly with the project’s mechanics by burning 50 Normies to create a collaborative one-of-one piece with artist A.C.K. That participation signaled to many collectors that the project was attracting long-term conviction rather than purely speculative trading.
NFTs Are Starting to Look Different Again
The broader appeal behind Normies may come from how the project reframes what an NFT can actually become. Instead of static profile pictures, the collection is evolving toward autonomous digital identities capable of holding wallets, interacting with applications, communicating with other agents, and eventually completing paid tasks directly on-chain.
Whether the current floor price represents the beginning of a larger trend or simply short-term momentum remains uncertain. But for now, Normies appears to be building something far more technical and infrastructure-focused than most NFT collections currently competing for attention.









