Beginner

What Is Doodles NFT

Doodles NFT started as a 10,000-piece Ethereum collection but now spans apps, tokens, and AI tools, making it essential to separate NFTs, DOOD, and real ownership rights before getting involved.

Yousra Anwar Ahmed Yousra Anwar Ahmed Updated May 28, 2026
Colorful Doodles NFT character with a rainbow imagination stream surrounded by playful cartoon creatures in a pastel animated art style

Overview

Introduction

Doodles NFT started as a 10,000-piece Ethereum collection of hand-drawn character art minted in 2021. It became one of the most recognized names in the NFT space and has since grown into something more layered: a Solana-based token called DOOD, an avatar app called Stoodio, an AI image model trained on its own IP, and an onchain worldbuilding layer called DreamNet.

Key Takeaways

  • What it is. It started as a fixed Ethereum profile-picture collection created from Burnt Toast's character art.
  • What it changes. The project has expanded into apps, media, AI tools, companion assets, and the separate DOOD token.
  • Main risk or limitation. Buying a Doodle does not grant full media ownership, guaranteed utility, or protection from token and marketplace scams.

What Is Doodles NFT?

Doodles NFT is a 10,000-piece NFT collection launched on Ethereum in 2021. Each token represents a colorful character with its own visual traits, and ownership is recorded permanently on the Ethereum blockchain.

Over time, Doodles expanded the original collection into a full product network: Stoodio for avatar customization, Doodles 2 as a companion asset layer, DOOD as a fungible ecosystem token, Doodles AI as a proprietary image model, and DreamNet as an onchain worldbuilding layer. That shorthand is common, but it blurs something important: an NFT, an app account, and a fungible token are three different things, and they carry different rights, different risks, and different wallet requirements.

How the Original Doodles NFT Collection Works on Ethereum

The original Doodles NFT collection is a fixed set of Ethereum-based digital collectibles. The Original Collection consists of 10,000 collectibles minted through an Ethereum smart contract at 0x8a90CAb2b38dba80c64b7734e58Ee1dB38B8992e. That contract address is the single most reliable way to confirm you are looking at the real collection and not a copy.

The 10,000-Piece Original Doodles NFT Collection

The fixed supply of 10,000 is what gives the original NFTs their scarcity. Later products, such as Doodles 2, wearables, Dooplicator, Genesis Box, Space Doodles, DOOD, and DreamNet, may carry the Doodles name, but they are not extra tokens inside the same original 10,000-piece set.

An asset can be officially connected to Doodles and still be completely different from owning one of the original NFTs. Before acting on any holder benefit or access claim, verify that the asset belongs to the correct collection, contract, and chain.

For complete beginners, it also helps to understand what blockchain is before digging into NFT contracts. The contract address is your ground truth. Everything else, floor price, social posts, Discord announcements, is secondary to what the chain record actually shows.

Doodles NFT: Traits, Rarity, and Provenance

Two things determine whether a Doodle is genuine and where it stands within the collection: traits and provenance.

Traits are the visual attributes that make one Doodle look different from another, like a specific background color, headwear, or facial expression. Rarity refers to how common or rare each trait combination is across all 10,000 tokens. Provenance is the on-chain history: every wallet that has ever held the token, every transfer, every listing.

The artwork may drive attention, but the blockchain record is what helps users separate an original token from a copy. That distinction matters most when browsing a marketplace, where fake collections often mimic the art closely enough to fool a quick glance.

FeatureWhat It Means For Users
Ethereum contractThe original collection is tied to a specific Ethereum contract, not a lookalike collection on another chain.
Fixed supplyThere are 10,000 original Doodles, so later official products should be evaluated as separate assets.
Traits and rarityVisual traits may affect collector demand, but rarity does not guarantee liquidity or resale value.
Token historyTransfers, listings, and ownership can be inspected through marketplace and explorer records.

The right chain check is especially important when fake collections mimic the art on cheaper networks. If you are new to Ethereum, it is worth understanding how gas, wallet compatibility, and contract verification work before you start browsing NFT listings.

Doodlebank and Early Holder Participation

Doodlebank was an early community treasury mechanism that gave original Doodles holders a say in how the project's funds were used. It was part of what separated Doodles from a simple art mint: holders were pitched as stakeholders, not just buyers.

The early community model does not mean every later initiative benefits every holder equally. Holder participation can change as terms, products, leadership, and token mechanics change. Doodlebank represented an early model of holder governance that the project has since moved beyond as it shifted toward a more traditional entertainment company structure. A buyer should separate that original pitch from what the current, verifiable holder benefits actually are.

How Doodles Became a Web3 Entertainment Brand

The original collection got attention as profile-picture art. What kept Doodles relevant beyond the 2021 NFT cycle was a deliberate push into media, apps, branded products, AI tooling, and live experiences. The current Doodles brand spans storytelling, music, digital collectibles, live activations, and lifestyle products.

From PFPs to Media IP

The shift from profile-picture collection to media IP was backed by real capital. A 2022 Business Wire release reported a $54 million first funding round at a $704 million valuation, with Seven Seven Six leading and Pharrell Williams named as a board member and chief brand officer.

That level of investment pushed Doodles into a different category from most NFT projects. The goal was to build music, culture, and entertainment properties around the characters, not just sell collectibles. Doodles agreed to acquire the animation studio Golden Wolf in 2023 to expand original content and storytelling capacity. That move aligned Doodles more closely with IP-driven entertainment brands than with typical NFT collections.

Stoodio, Doodles 2, and Wearables

Stoodio is the app layer where users create and customize Doodles-style characters. Doodles 2 extends that into a companion asset format, with wearables and account-based experiences that sit alongside the original collection.

The key point is that these are separate asset types. A Stoodio profile, a wearable, a Doodles 2 character, and an original Ethereum Doodle may all sit inside the same brand universe, but they do not carry identical rights, scarcity, or resale profiles.

Think of it as a hub-and-spoke layout. The original Ethereum collection is the recognizable center. Stoodio, Doodles 2, wearables, and token access are products built around that center, not extensions of it. Buying into one does not automatically give you the rights or benefits of another.

Doodles AI and DreamNet

Doodles AI and DreamNet are the project's most experimental layers, and together they represent a significant departure from anything an NFT collector would have expected in 2021.

Doodles launched Doodles AI in March 2026 as a tool powered by Prism 1.0, a proprietary model trained on Doodles-owned IP, with no third-party training data described in the announcement. In practical terms, this means the model generates art in the Doodles visual style without relying on external datasets, which matters for IP control and future licensing.

DreamNet is a more experimental participation layer, with character agents, place creation, token-weighted participation, trust scores, and a Vector Worldstate that AI media tools can reference. It functions more like a story protocol than a fan app: holders and token participants can contribute to a shared world that AI tools then draw on for media production.

These additions add complexity for new users. Before connecting a wallet to any Doodles product, it is worth confirming which layer you are actually interacting with, because each one has different requirements, different token connections, and different risk profiles.

What the DOOD Token Adds to Doodles

DOOD is a fungible token tied to the Doodles ecosystem. It is separate from the original NFT collection in every practical sense: different asset type, different blockchain, different wallet setup, and different risk profile.

DOOD Is a Token, Not the Original NFT

The phrase “Doodles NFT token” sometimes gets used loosely to mean DOOD, but they are not the same thing. DOOD is a token tied to the Doodles ecosystem, not proof that a wallet owns one of the original 10,000 Ethereum NFTs. Holding DOOD does not make you an original Doodles collector, and holding an original Doodle does not automatically give you DOOD.

AssetWhat It Represents
Doodles NFTA non-fungible Ethereum collectible from the original 10,000-piece collection.
DOOD tokenA fungible ecosystem token launched separately from the original NFT collection.

How Solana Changes DOOD Access

The original Doodles collection lives on Ethereum. DOOD does not. DOOD launched on Solana on May 9, 2025, with plans discussed for a Base bridge and a community-focused allocation. That chain split has real practical consequences: you may need two separate wallets, two separate blockchain explorers, and two separate sets of scam checks depending on whether you are holding the NFT or interacting with the token.

If you are only familiar with Ethereum, it is worth reading up on Solana before interacting with DOOD. You will also need a Solana-compatible wallet rather than the Ethereum wallet you would use to hold or transfer the original NFT. Using the wrong wallet type is a common and often irreversible mistake for new users.

DOOD Token Supply and Allocation

The total DOOD supply is at 10 billion and 68% is allocated to community and growth categories, including holders, ecosystem growth, liquidity, and new users.

A community-heavy allocation sounds positive, but it does not automatically translate into utility or price support. Large community allocations can come with vesting schedules, token unlocks, and selling pressure that affects the market. They also attract scam claim sites that copy official branding and offer fake airdrops. Users should verify the current official claim route before connecting a wallet, because airdrop pages and fake token contracts are a common attack surface.

If you are trading DOOD, centralized venues and onchain swaps carry different custody, liquidity, and contract-verification risks. Understanding decentralized exchanges is useful before using any onchain swap with an unfamiliar token.

What Doodle NFT Owners Get

This is the section most buyers skip, and the one most likely to cause problems later. Owning a Doodle gives you blockchain-verified control of a specific token and a limited media license tied to it. It does not give you the Doodles brand, unrestricted commercial rights, or any guaranteed financial return.

NFT Ownership Versus Media Rights

NFT ownership and media rights are two different things, and the Doodles license keeps them clearly separate. The Doodles Digital Collectibles Media License Agreement grants personal, non-commercial use of the linked collectibles media while reserving rights that are not expressly licensed.

That means you can use a Doodle as a profile picture or display it personally without issue. It does not mean you own the artwork outright. The token and the image rights travel together only within the license terms.

Commercial Use Limits

Commercial use is limited under the current media license. The agreement excludes commercialization, derivative works, modification, new NFT creation based on the linked media, and trademark use without approval.

This is easy to miss because buying an NFT is often described casually as “owning the art.” In this case it is not. If you plan to use a Doodle in merchandise, advertising, a game, or any revenue-generating product, you need to read the active license before assuming you can.

Transfers, Forks, and Platform Risk

When a Doodle changes hands, the license transfers to the new lawful owner and the seller's license ends. That makes wallet security and correct transfer records part of your rights picture, not just a trading detail.

Forks and platform support can also change holder treatment. The license gives Doodles discretion around which mainnet version is recognized for rights and participation. A wrapped, bridged, or forked version of a Doodle may not carry the same treatment as the original. Do not assume it does without checking.

How to Buy, Hold, or Use Doodles NFT Safely

The biggest risk when buying Doodles is not market volatility. It is operational: signing into the wrong collection, connecting to a fake token contract, or approving a malicious transaction before you realize what you are doing. The steps below apply whether you are buying the NFT, claiming DOOD, or using a Doodles app.

Verify the Collection Before Connecting

Verification should happen before a wallet prompt appears. A Doodles NFT search on any marketplace can surface lookalikes, so users should start from official project links, confirm the contract, and inspect the marketplace page before approving any transaction.

Run through this checklist before buying or claiming anything tied to Doodles:

  • Confirm the original Ethereum contract for original Doodles.
  • Start from official Doodles links, not ads, search results, or DMs.
  • Check marketplace verification badges and collection history.
  • Avoid collections with copied art and short mint histories.
  • Review any approvals after using unfamiliar apps.

If a listing looks legitimate at a glance, cross-reference it against the official contract address. NFT marketplaces support discovery and trading, but they do not screen every listing for fakes. That check is your responsibility.

Use the Right Wallet and Network

The right wallet depends on the asset and network. Original collection tokens require Ethereum-compatible custody, while DOOD activity requires Solana-compatible setup when interacting on Solana.

Keeping wallets separate also reduces risk. A wallet you use for long-term NFT storage should not be the same one you use to test claim links, new token swaps, or unfamiliar mints. If one wallet gets compromised, the other stays safe. A general crypto wallet guide is useful if you are setting up for the first time, and Ethereum-compatible wallets are the right starting point specifically for the original Doodles collection.

Airdrop Links Carry High Risk

Airdrop links are high risk because scammers copy branding, domain names, and social posts during token launches. The DOOD launch generated significant attention, which also made it a target. Fake claim sites that mimic official pages closely enough to fool a rushed click are common during any high-profile token event.

The process should stay simple: use official links only, verify the domain character by character, connect a wallet you can afford to lose if something goes wrong, read every transaction prompt before approving, and revoke permissions you no longer need. Never enter a seed phrase into any claim site, browser popup, support form, or direct message.

How to Evaluate Doodles NFT Without Chasing the Floor Price

Floor price gets most of the attention in NFT communities, but it is one of the weaker signals for evaluating whether an asset is worth buying. A Doodles floor price tells you the cheapest listed token at a given moment. It does not tell you whether demand is real, whether rights are clear, whether products are being delivered, or whether the token has any durable utility.

Floor Price Is Only One Signal

Floor price is useful for a quick market read, but it can be thin, volatile, and sensitive to a few listings. A collection can show a high floor while real demand is shallow, or a low floor while long-term holders are inactive.

More useful checks include: recent sales volume, how many unique buyers there are, listing depth across price levels, holder concentration, offer quality, and whether tokens actually trade near the displayed floor price. For broader context on where Doodles sits within NFT market trends, CryptoSlate's NFT coverage tracks collection-level signals across the space.

NFT Value and Token Value Can Move Separately

Doodles the NFT and DOOD the token are different assets, and they can trade in opposite directions. The NFT is scarce collection ownership with a media license attached. DOOD is fungible token exposure to a broader ecosystem that keeps expanding.

A token launch can increase attention without lifting every NFT, and an NFT floor can hold up even when the token trades poorly. Evaluate the asset you actually plan to own rather than assuming every Doodles-linked price will move together.

Red Flags to Check Before Buying

Hype moves fast in NFT markets, but the checks below are slower and more reliable. Run through them before any purchase:

  • Whether official products have actually shipped versus what was promised on old roadmaps.
  • Real usage numbers in Stoodio, Doodles AI, or DreamNet.
  • Holder concentration and any patterns that suggest wash trading.
  • DOOD token unlock schedules and allocation-related selling pressure.
  • Whether the media license supports your intended commercial use.
  • Marketplace liquidity during quiet periods, when the hype has died down.

None of these turn Doodles into a risk-free asset. They make the decision less dependent on social momentum and a single floor-price screenshot.

FAQs

Is DOOD the same as a Doodles NFT?

No. DOOD is a fungible ecosystem token, while a Doodle is a non-fungible Ethereum collectible from the original 10,000-piece collection.

What blockchain is Doodles NFT on?

The original collection is on Ethereum. DOOD activity is Solana-linked, so users may need a different wallet and network setup for token actions.

Who created Doodles NFT?

Doodles was co-founded by artist Scott Martin, known as Burnt Toast, and Web3 builders Evan Keast and Jordan Castro.

Can Doodles NFT owners use the art commercially?

Current Doodles licensing gives holders personal, non-commercial display rights to the linked media, but it does not grant broad commercialization, derivative-work, or trademark rights.

What is Stoodio?

Stoodio is the Doodles app layer for creating and customizing Doodles-style characters, wearables, and related experiences beyond the original 10,000 Ethereum NFTs.

Is Doodles NFT still active?

Yes. Doodles has continued through DOOD, Stoodio, Doodles AI, DreamNet, media projects, and brand partnerships, but activity should be evaluated separately from NFT price speculation.