iNDEX
Reports · The reading

A clear reading, before you act.

On-chain art deserves to be read the way any serious collecting category is read: independently, in plain language, by someone with no position to defend. A report states what is actually true about a work or a collection, the contract, the ownership, the real liquidity, the provenance, the cultural standing, so you can decide for yourself. It never tells you to buy or sell.

Run a report
What INDEX reads

Three kinds of reading.

● Available now

Trust Report

For a collection, before you buy

The independent pre-purchase check. Contract safety, holder concentration, real liquidity, provenance, and a plain-English read. Facts, never advice.

Run a Trust Report
○ Forthcoming

Cultural Reading

For a single work or collection

Where a work sits in the record. Its originality, influence, and standing in the Canon, read against the four measures rather than the floor.

Coming soon
○ Forthcoming

Collector Reading

For a wallet or ENS

A reading of taste. The through-line across a collection, its archetype, and its cultural standing. The shareable portrait of a serious eye.

Coming soon
How to read a report

New here? Start with this.

It describes, never prescribes

A report states the situation in plain terms. It will never say buy, sell, hold, or "good entry." The moment a report implies timing, it stops being trustworthy. The judgment is left to you.

Facts, not accusations

"Five wallets hold sixty percent of supply" is a fact. "This is a scam" is not. INDEX reports what is true and lets you draw the conclusion. That restraint is also what makes it credible.

Read each pillar on its own

Concern is shown per category, not as one blended score. A work can be low concern on the contract and medium on liquidity. One finding never poisons the whole report.

Value is honest, never inflated

Where value appears, it is exit-realistic: what could actually be liquidated. A patient exit near floor, an instant exit at the real bid. Never floor multiplied by quantity.

The questions are the point

Every report ends with the questions an experienced collector would ask next. That is how a report turns data into a way of thinking, rather than a verdict to obey.

Read-only, always

A report reads public chain and marketplace data. It never asks you to connect a wallet for signing, approve anything, or share a key. Looking costs nothing and risks nothing.