Profile picture collections, better known across the NFT space as PFPs, defined the early years of the on-chain collectibles boom. Bored Ape Yacht Club emerged at the center of that era, blending celebrity adoption with a sharp visual identity, and many of the cultural codes it established still shape how collectors think about identity in 2025.
What set the apes apart was not only their artwork but the social layer that surrounded them. Owners gained access to private events, exclusive Discord channels, and downstream airdrops such as Mutant Ape Yacht Club and Bored Ape Kennel Club. Over time, this turned a simple JPEG into a membership card to a global cultural club, complete with its own etiquette and inside jokes.
The aftermath of that boom has been more complicated. As the broader market cooled, BAYC floor prices contracted significantly, and many holders questioned whether the brand could maintain its prestige outside crypto-native circles. Yuga Labs responded by expanding into the Otherside metaverse, gaming partnerships, and live activations that aimed to keep the IP relevant beyond pure speculation.
Newer PFP projects have learned from those lessons. Collections such as Pudgy Penguins, Azuki, and Milady have each tried different approaches: some lean on real-world brand expansion, others on storytelling-driven roadmaps, and still others on tightly knit subcultural communities. The common thread is a recognition that strong art and clever supply mechanics are no longer enough on their own.
For collectors today, the PFP question is less about chasing the next moonshot and more about evaluating which projects can survive long-term. Cultural endurance, transparent leadership, and integration with broader entertainment ecosystems matter much more than they did in 2021. The Bored Apes still loom large over that conversation, but they are no longer alone in writing the next chapter.











