@EduMock What dumbass shit does this even mean?? If you’re sending a good card in for a 10 you aren’t sending it in value anyways. You’d just get bumped up on price lol. Only affects the people sending in $10-$30 cards to try for a moonshot 10 selling for $100-$400
The reason a lot of people miss out on unique trading card investment opportunities in this market is because they are extremely attached to the STATED RARITY of certain cards.
Let's look at Aerodactyl GX from Unified Minds for example.
We are told that this is a "SECRET RARE". When we pull it from a pack, we are relatively excited to get a "hit".
But really, it's just a $20 card raw, and under $200 in a PSA 10.
But let's take a reverse holo Munchlax from that same set. Literally only two listed on eBay at $50 each. PSA 10 price? No one knows... there are only two in existence with no recorded sales. If one popped up, in this market it'd likely fetch thousands.
But why? The STATED RARITY of this card is uncommon. It's not a full art. Doesn't have any texture. It's not SUPPOSED to be a hit.
Because the older a set is, it becomes LESS about stated rarity, and more about a combination of ACTUAL rarity/supply and demand.
If you pulled a rainbow Aerodactyl back in the day, you sleeved it and put it in a binder because you were 'supposed' to. If you pulled the reverse holo uncommon Munchlax, it got tossed in a bulk card box or sold for pennies.
There's a LOT of opportunity in this part of the market right now. Not necessarily with modern cards, they're too overprinted and everyone is taking care of everything, but those mid-era cards that people need to complete their collections. The reverse holo commons, the stamped promos, the stuff that we were TOLD isn't rare - but has become rare and sought after because back in the day, no one took care of them.
Your mindset needs to not ONLY be looking at the stated rare cards and chases, but also be considering - what are the cards, of ALL stated rarities, that may be in demand by completionists in 2026? A lot of gold out there.
Bought and received today $400 worth of Pokémon Booster Packs from @Walmart, and they are all fake. Do yourself a favor and buy them in a Walmart store. When buying them online, they come from a 3rd party scammer/seller which was my mistake for not seeing that. Lesson learned.