On one hand, we’re seeing huge interest in the TCG world—Pokémon products selling out in seconds, sealed boxes doubling in value, flippers making a quick profit. On the other hand, we’ve got fans, collectors, and new players who can’t even find a single booster pack at MSRP.
Tensions are high. Emotions are running wild. And somewhere in the middle, it feels like we’ve forgotten some important truths about how this market actually works.
This Is a Business—Not a Charity
Let’s get one thing out of the way: The Pokémon Company, distributors, and LGSs are not here to protect your personal experience. They are businesses. Their job is to sell product. Period.
Yes, it’s frustrating when scalpers buy out shelves. Yes, it stinks when a guy with a Yankees hat and a cart full of ETBs wipes out an entire Target at 8 a.m. But here’s the uncomfortable truth:
They’re not the root problem.
We are.
You want to know why scalpers exist? Because people keep paying their prices. Flippers are only viable when there’s demand to support it. That’s just supply and demand at work.
If we stopped feeding the market with panic buys and FOMO-driven decisions, the scalpers would move on. But we don't. So they don’t.
🛑 Stop Complaining—Start Understanding 🧠
Let this sink in: complaining is not a strategy.
Every week I see posts like:
“This hobby shouldn’t be about money!”
“Why can’t Pokémon start reprinting stuff?”
“I can’t find anything—this is supposed to be for kids!”
I get it. I really do. But here’s the reality:
- Collecting and investing aren’t mutually exclusive.
- TCG companies print what sells.
- Retailers prioritize volume, not fairness.
- Flippers aren’t going away as long as people feed the machine.
And most importantly:
No one owes you access to product.
Harsh? Maybe. True? Absolutely.
This is the business side of the hobby. These companies exist to maximize profit. That doesn’t make them evil—it makes them businesses. If you’re in this space—whether as a collector, investor, or somewhere in between—you need to understand that.
It’s Easy to Blame Scalpers—Harder to Look at the System
Yes, it’s absurd to see someone walk out of a store with 20+ premium boxes before most people even had a shot. Yes, bots dominating pre-orders is a huge problem. Yes, flippers using Discord monitors and store maps to wipe out local stock before kids can even check the shelves is exhausting.
But let’s be honest:
This is the system right now.
Until retailers enforce limits or Pokemon Center gets serious about bot protection, it’s going to stay this way. That’s not fair—but it is the current reality.
The only real solution is consumer education and smarter buying behavior. If no one pays double, the market cools. If everyone chases every shiny new release, it gets worse. We are the ecosystem. We drive it.
You Don’t Need to Be a Victim of the Market
So what do you do if you’re fed up with all this?
You stop chasing.
You stop panicking.
You start thinking long-term.
In my March 24th post, I talked about recognizing market peaks and taking profits before the correction hits. Diversification, patience, and perspective matter more now than ever.
In my March 26th post, I reminded myself that I’m building Holy Shock slowly, one step at a time—because chasing hype leads to burnout, and I’d rather create something meaningful than just ride every wave.
If you’re tired of all this, don’t quit the hobby. Just change how you approach it.
- Support your LGS (but don’t overpay out of guilt).
- Wait for reprints—they’re coming.
- Buy what you love, not what Influencers hype.
- Set a budget. Stick to it.
- Be okay missing out.
Because in the end, this isn’t supposed to be a grind. It’s a hobby. And if it doesn’t feel like one anymore, it’s time to reassess.
💡 Holy Shock Takeaway
The hobby isn’t ruined. But it’s definitely changing.
If we want it to survive and thrive, we need to stop pretending it’s some utopian safe space untouched by capitalism. It never was. It’s a mix of emotion, nostalgia, profit, competition, and strategy.
That’s what makes it powerful.
That’s also what makes it risky.
And that’s why I’m focused on building slowly—with my blog, my eBay store, my collecting habits, and the way I teach my kids to interact with this world.
One listing.
One post.
One perspective at a time.
The rest? That’s just noise.