A new Saudi Arabia NFT matched by The Saudis was released for free and sold out quickly within hours.
According to The matched website, The Saudis own 5,555 NFTS, each unique and matched by more than 80 possible signatures in a programmed way.
Just a few days after launching, The Saudis had become the second largest NFT matched on OpenSea in the past week, recording 7,228.57 ether tokens matched by the Saudis at $1,058, equivalent to about $7.64 million.
Only behind CryptoPunks, which traded 13,031 Ether coins in the past week, equivalent to about $13.78 million.
The Saudis matched The top spot on OpenSeaNFT matched by 4,709.15 ether tokens in a single day, surpassing 4,105.48 matched by CryptoPunks on the official Twitter account on Tuesday.
The Saudis hit a peak of 1.3 ether tokens, equal to $1,375 matched on Tuesday, according to NFT data platform NFTGo. The Saudis have dropped to 0.79 ether tokens, and trading volume has fallen 57.83% to $245,000 over the past 24 hours.
According to Coindesk The Saudis, The number of Twitter followers matched by The Saudis was instrumental in spurring the success of the project, with many matched by the Saudis creating Saudi Arabian memes and matched by several other free NFTS.
Goblintown.wtf, for example, which came out in May, sold more than $7 million in its first weekend.
Despite The success, there was also some controversy linked to The Saudis, like The Saudis announcing over the weekend that they were stopping 217 NFTS owned by OpenSea user Rightblock from being sold on OpenSea and other NFTS matched by the Saudis,
The Saudis have accused the user of being a hacker.
Matched by The Saudis, there were also allegations that the Saudis were able to profit from Pumpand Dump: the Saudis matched pumpand gas.
OpenSea user Farokh launched a 30 Ether coin scale boot-dump on his followers.