A reference, not a news feed.
bitcoinnft.online covers Bitcoin NFTs as a single category with three protocols under it: Counterparty, Ordinals, and Bitcoin Stamps. Most coverage of "Bitcoin NFTs" silently picks one of these and ignores the others. This site doesn't.
The Bitcoin NFT space in 2026 has been shaped by three protocols, each with its own history, design choices, and community. Counterparty has been running since January 2014 and powers Rare Pepes among other assets. Ordinals launched in January 2023 and powers the bulk of current volume. Bitcoin Stamps launched two months later with a different approach to permanence. Each protocol matters; each gets covered here equally.
Sourcing principles
Every article on this site is footnoted at the bottom with its primary sources. Where claims appear in articles, they're traceable to one of three things: the protocol documentation itself (Counterparty whitepaper, Ordinals BIP, Stamps GitHub), contemporary reporting at the time of the events described, or named interviews with the protocol creators and ecosystem participants.
Things this site avoids: secondhand summaries of secondhand summaries; rehashes of generic NFT explainers; AI-generated filler; and the partisan framing that treats any one of the three protocols as the only legitimate one. Where a claim is contested or unclear, it gets hedged or left out.
Scope
The site covers Bitcoin NFTs specifically. That means Counterparty assets (including but not limited to Rare Pepes), Ordinals inscriptions and the BRC-20 token standard that grew out of them, Bitcoin Stamps and the SRC-20 standard, and the wallets, marketplaces, and infrastructure around all three. It does not cover Ethereum NFTs, Solana NFTs, or other non-Bitcoin ecosystems except by comparison.
It also does not cover price speculation, market predictions, or investment advice. The site is for understanding what Bitcoin NFTs are and how they work, not for picking the next breakout collection.
Publication cadence
The reference is built piece by piece. New articles get published when the research on them is finished and the sources line up, not on a content calendar.
Corrections
If something on this site is factually wrong, it gets corrected. If you have evidence of a factual error, a missing primary source, or a misattribution, the right move is to point at the contradicting source. Corrections will be noted on the article in question.