TopGoal (GOAL) x CoinMarketCap NFT Airdrop: What Happened and Why There's No 3rd Event

Crypto & Blockchain TopGoal (GOAL) x CoinMarketCap NFT Airdrop: What Happened and Why There's No 3rd Event

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Back in 2022, TopGoal (GOAL) and CoinMarketCap ran a big NFT airdrop that caught the attention of crypto and football fans alike. It promised free NFTs, social media rewards, and a chance to own digital cards of football legends. But today, as of December 2025, there’s no third NFT event. No announcement. No countdown. No active airdrop. And if you’re searching for one, you’re not alone - but you’re also looking in the wrong place.

What Was the TopGoal NFT Airdrop?

The main airdrop happened between October and November 2022. It wasn’t just a quick giveaway - it was a structured campaign. CoinMarketCap hosted it, and TopGoal distributed 10,000 NFTs to 10,000 winners. Each winner got one unique NFT card featuring licensed football stars like legends from Real Madrid, Barcelona, and other top clubs.

To enter, you had to do more than just sign up. You needed to:

  • Follow TopGoal on Twitter (@TopGoal_NFT), Telegram (@topgoalnft), Instagram (@topgoalnft), Facebook (TopGoalNFT), and Medium (@TopGoal_NFT)
  • Add both GOAL and TMT tokens to your CoinMarketCap watchlist
  • Connect your TopGoal account to your social media profiles using a Google Form
  • Follow TopGoal’s profile on CoinMarketCap’s Gravity platform

This wasn’t a random抽奖. It was a marketing machine designed to grow TopGoal’s community across platforms. The total value of the airdrop was estimated around $30,000, but no individual NFT price was ever officially confirmed. Still, the cards were tied to TopGoal’s football metaverse - a game where you could use your NFTs to play matches, trade players, and earn rewards.

Why Was CoinMarketCap Involved?

CoinMarketCap doesn’t just partner with any project. It’s one of the most trusted crypto data platforms in the world. Back then, they only listed airdrops from projects that had real development teams, clear roadmaps, and active communities. TopGoal passed that bar - at least in 2022.

That’s why the airdrop got so much attention. It wasn’t buried in a Discord server. It was front and center on CoinMarketCap’s official page. Thousands of users signed up, hoping to get a piece of a football-themed metaverse that promised real utility - not just JPEGs.

What Happened After the Airdrop?

The hype faded fast.

As of December 2025, the GOAL token trades at $0.002549. Its 24-hour trading volume is just $19,719. That’s less than 1.5% of its $1.36 million market cap. For comparison, even small-cap tokens with similar market caps usually trade volumes 5-10x higher. This tells you something: people aren’t buying or selling GOAL. They’re holding - maybe hoping, maybe stuck.

There are 30,130 wallet holders. That’s not nothing - but it’s not a thriving community either. And here’s the kicker: the fully diluted valuation (if all 1 billion tokens were in circulation) is $2.51 million. That means over half the supply is still locked up. No major unlocks have been announced. No clear plan for releasing those tokens.

The project’s ranking on CoinMarketCap? #2095. That’s deep in the long tail. You won’t find it on the trending list. You won’t see it in newsletters. It’s not in the top 1,000 projects by activity.

An abandoned football metaverse arena with fading NFT screens and a lone figure staring at a low token price on a monitor.

Is There a Third NFT Airdrop?

No. There isn’t.

Some blogs and forums still mention a “2nd NFT airdrop,” but even that’s poorly documented. There’s zero official mention of a third event - not on TopGoal’s Twitter, not on their Telegram, not on CoinMarketCap’s airdrop page.

CoinMarketCap’s current airdrop section shows zero active and zero upcoming airdrops. The page is empty. That’s not a glitch. That’s a signal.

TopGoal hasn’t launched a new NFT drop since 2022. Their website still shows the old metaverse interface. Their social media posts are sparse. The last major update was in early 2023. Since then, silence.

Why Did It Stall?

The crypto NFT boom of 2021-2022 crashed hard. Games like Axie Infinity lost 90% of their players. NFT marketplaces shut down. Investors moved on. TopGoal was never a breakout hit - it was a niche play.

Football NFTs have a huge audience. But TopGoal never built the game well enough to keep people playing. You can’t just give out NFTs and expect users to stick around. You need:

  • Smooth gameplay
  • Regular updates
  • Reasons to earn and spend tokens
  • Community events

TopGoal had the licenses. They had the players. But they didn’t deliver the experience. Without active gameplay, the NFTs became digital collectibles with no use. And without use, they lost value.

A cracked football NFT card splitting between vibrant gameplay and crumbling digital dust, symbolizing failed execution.

Should You Still Get Involved?

If you’re looking to earn from an airdrop - don’t wait for TopGoal. There won’t be one.

If you’re thinking of buying GOAL tokens as an investment - be careful. Low volume, low liquidity, and no recent development make it a high-risk, low-reward play. You’re betting on a project that’s been quiet for over two years.

But if you’re a football fan who still believes in the idea of owning a digital card of Messi or Ronaldo - and you’re okay with holding it as a novelty - then maybe keep your old NFT. Don’t buy more. Don’t chase new ones. Just hold what you have.

What’s the Real Lesson Here?

TopGoal’s story isn’t about a missing third airdrop. It’s about how most football NFT projects fail.

They focus on marketing - airdrops, influencer posts, partnerships - but forget the product. You can’t build a metaverse with just NFTs. You need a game that people want to play every day. You need rewards that matter. You need updates that keep users excited.

TopGoal had a great start. But without execution, even the best partnerships fade.

Today, the only thing you can do is check TopGoal’s official channels. If they ever come back, you’ll hear it from them first. Until then, treat any "3rd NFT airdrop" claim as a scam. There isn’t one. And there probably won’t be.

10 Comments

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    Jon Visotzky

    December 5, 2025 AT 07:55
    i remember signing up for that airdrop like it was yesterday. got my nft of ronaldo, still have it as a wallpaper. no one talks about it anymore but honestly? i dont even care. it was cool while it lasted.

    topgoal never delivered on the game part. just gave us digital trading cards and vanished. kinda sad.
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    Chris Mitchell

    December 7, 2025 AT 02:52
    No third airdrop because there was never a project. Just marketing smoke and mirrors.
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    Martin Hansen

    December 8, 2025 AT 02:35
    Wow. Another crypto project that thought giving away JPEGs of footballers was enough to build a metaverse. Bro, you don't just slap a license on a card and call it a game. You need mechanics. You need progression. You need to make people want to log in.

    TopGoal didn't build a platform. They built a graveyard for NFTs that never got used. And now they're ghosting everyone. Typical.
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    Lore Vanvliet

    December 8, 2025 AT 22:13
    OMG I KNEW IT!!! I TOLD EVERYONE THIS WAS A SCAM FROM DAY ONE!!! 😤🔥

    Why do you think CoinMarketCap deleted their airdrop page? BECAUSE THEY GOT SCARED!!! The Feds are coming for these fake football NFTs!!! I have screenshots of my old entries!! I'm filing a complaint!! 🚨
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    Frank Cronin

    December 9, 2025 AT 03:22
    Let me guess - someone’s still holding GOAL tokens thinking ‘it’ll pump someday’. Sweet. Keep dreaming. The only thing pumping is your hope.

    Market cap of $1.36M with $19k volume? That’s not a token. That’s a digital tombstone with a ‘RIP’ tag. And you’re the one holding the shovel.
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    Shane Budge

    December 10, 2025 AT 08:53
    Was the second airdrop real?
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    sonia sifflet

    December 12, 2025 AT 05:57
    You people are naive. TopGoal was never about football or NFTs. It was a pump-and-dump scheme disguised as a metaverse. The team was Indian. The devs were anonymous. The website was built on WordPress. And CoinMarketCap? They got paid to list it. That's why it vanished. No one cared because no one believed. You think a football NFT can survive without real gameplay? Please. Even Axie had better mechanics.
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    Chris Jenny

    December 13, 2025 AT 01:10
    I don't trust this. I don't trust ANY of this. Why did CoinMarketCap suddenly go silent? Why did the Twitter account stop posting? Why did the Telegram group get deleted? Someone is covering something up. This wasn't just a failure - this was a cover-up. The government? The banks? They shut it down because they knew what was coming. The NFTs were keys to something bigger. Something they didn't want us to see. I have friends in Nigeria who got the NFTs. They say the cards... glow at night. In the dark. In their wallets. I'm not joking.
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    Uzoma Jenfrancis

    December 13, 2025 AT 19:46
    I still have my NFT. It's in my wallet. I don't trade. I don't sell. I just look at it sometimes. Messi smiling back at me. I don't need the game. I don't need the tokens. I just like knowing I had a piece of something real. Even if the world forgot it.
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    Renelle Wilson

    December 15, 2025 AT 16:58
    It's deeply unfortunate to witness the erosion of what could have been a meaningful intersection between sports fandom and blockchain technology. TopGoal, at its inception, demonstrated a clear understanding of the cultural capital embedded in football legends - and the potential for digital ownership to foster emotional connection. However, the absence of sustained technical development, community engagement, and transparent governance ultimately undermined its viability. The project's decline is not merely a cautionary tale about crypto speculation; it is a reflection of the broader challenge facing Web3 initiatives that prioritize marketing over utility. Had the team invested in iterative gameplay improvements, tokenomics that incentivized active participation, and consistent communication with stakeholders, the outcome might have been fundamentally different. As it stands, we are left with artifacts - beautiful, nostalgic, but functionally inert - that serve as monuments to unrealized potential.

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