>>101326769You're not buying an actual thing to own, you're essentially paying for a certificate of authenticity, which claims you own it even though you fully don't. It's something which holds worth based on its "limited" availability and the perceived/desired value of the thing you're buying a certificate to, but that only matters if you get into stocks.
For example, say you want treasure. You buy a treasure map with an ‘X’ marking “Yarr matey, a limited hat be located here.” If that treasure is damaged, lost, or even altered in some fashion, your map loses value. That map is the NFT.