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    Home » Why the World’s Wealthiest Are Buying Up ‘Digital Real Estate’ Again
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    Why the World’s Wealthiest Are Buying Up ‘Digital Real Estate’ Again

    Taylor LoweryBy Taylor LoweryJune 16, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Just before a market either repeats itself or makes the same error twice, a certain level of confidence appears. That’s about where things stand with digital real estate in the middle of 2026, as a new wave of affluent buyers begins circling virtual land once more. Many of them are newly minted through AI ventures, while others are sitting on crypto gains accumulated since the last bull run. Without the Super Bowl commercials or the Snoop Dogg headlines of 2021 and 2022, it’s happening quietly, but it’s still happening.

    According to reports, Brighty, a cryptocurrency payments platform started by a former Revolut engineer, has facilitated more than 100 real estate transactions for affluent customers in just the last year. Each buyer’s average monthly spending is estimated to be around $50,000, and individual purchases have reached the millions. Instead of parcels within Decentraland, the majority of these transactions refer to actual apartments in locations like London, Malta, and Andorra. However, the desire seems familiar, and it’s worth considering whether the distinction between real and virtual property is becoming more hazy once more, as it did for a short while a few years ago.

    Why the World’s Wealthiest Are Buying Up 'Digital Real Estate' Again
    Why the World’s Wealthiest Are Buying Up ‘Digital Real Estate’ Again

    This time, the buying is being done by someone else. NFT speculators and crypto-native funds, who admittedly bet more on hype than on utility, were the main drivers of the initial metaverse land rush. It appears that this round is more institutional. A new class of millionaires is being pushed toward diversification strategies that increasingly incorporate both tangible trophy assets and speculative digital holdings by AI fortunes, which are frequently created on paper through private company valuations rather than public listings. Dubai frequently comes up in these discussions, in part due to tax concerns and in part because the city has worked for years to project an image of being a welcoming destination for digital wealth.

    Plots in The Sandbox sold for hundreds of thousands of dollars in 2021, and a parcel close to Snoop Dogg’s virtual estate sold for $450,000 based only on the logic of celebrity proximity. It’s difficult to ignore the echo of that year. Roblox had recently gone public at $42 billion, Animoca Brands was valued at $5 billion, and venture capitalists like Drew Austin were envisioning virtual universities inside blockchain-based worlds that, for the most part, never came to pass. Once the crypto winter arrived, a lot of that enthusiasm vanished. Few of the ambitious plans made it to real user numbers.

    And yet here we are once more, witnessing the emergence of a comparable pattern with more financially supported participants. Younger tech clients who want exposure to alternative assets are becoming more and more demanding, according to wealth managers, and private banks are reorganizing their services to cater to this type of client, whose net worth is primarily found in equity stakes and cryptocurrency wallets rather than inherited trusts. According to UBS, this generation treats digital assets the same way earlier generations treated municipal bonds, and they almost instinctively gravitate toward tech-adjacent investments.

    Some of this seems to be sincere conviction, and some of it seems to be fear of missing the next Bitcoin-like moment. According to recent wealth reports, investors who witnessed cryptocurrency go from a joke to a 241,700-person millionaire club in a single year don’t want to be left out twice. Probably more than anyone wants to publicly acknowledge, anxiety is doing a lot of the heavy lifting in this situation.

    It’s really unclear if this will result in another real virtual land boom or just more cryptocurrency-funded purchases of traditional apartments dressed up in blockchain terminology. Strangely, the infrastructure for real metaverse living hasn’t developed as quickly as the funding for it. The analogy to a pre-Napster internet is still frequently used. The buyers’ level of seriousness has changed. They no longer pursue their Bored Ape neighbors. With more steady hands than before, they are hedging, diversifying, and sometimes still speculating.

    Digital Real Estate
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    Taylor Lowery
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    Taylor Lowery is a senior editor at glofiish.com, a technology writer, and a true circuit enthusiast. She works in the tech sector, so she does more than just cover it. Taylor works for a smartphone company during the day, which gives her a firsthand look at how gadgets are designed, manufactured, promoted, and ultimately placed in people's hands.Her writing is unique because of this insider viewpoint. Taylor makes the technical connections that other writers overlook, whether she's dissecting the silicon architecture of a new flagship chipset, analyzing the implications of a significant Android update for actual users, or tracking the effects of a new AI model announcement across the mobile industry.Her editorial focus covers every aspect of the current tech stack, including smartphone software and hardware, artificial intelligence (from large language models and generative tools to on-device inference), and the broader innovation trends influencing the direction of the consumer technology sector. She is especially passionate about the nexus of AI and mobile computing, which she feels is still in its most exciting early stages.

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