I was thinking about this the other day - what if someone had actually loaded up on rare Pokémon cards back in 1999 instead of letting them sit in a drawer? The returns would've been absolutely wild.



Take the Charizard from the first ever pokemon card sets released in the US. Back then you could grab a booster pack at Walmart for like $2.47. If you'd dropped $1,000 on those packs, you're looking at roughly 404 sets. Now here's where it gets crazy - one of these cards sold for $420,000 in early 2022. Imagine if even half your sets had a Charizard in that condition. You'd be looking at something like $84+ million.

Obviously that was kind of the peak. I saw a recent sale from 2024 where one went for around $168,000. Still insane, but you can see the market cooled off a bit from those 2022 highs. Even so, if you'd managed to pull multiple Charizards from your $1,000 investment back then, you'd still be sitting on several million.

The Japanese no-rarity versions are wild too. One sold for $300,000 not long ago. The reason these cards hold value is pretty straightforward - they're rare, they're in pristine condition, and there's this whole nostalgic factor. Most kids in 1999 just played with their cards rather than preserving them, so finding mint condition first editions is actually pretty scarce.

What's interesting is watching how the market has evolved. Some people are saying it's time to buy the dip, others think these cards were overvalued to begin with. But that's how any market works, right? Whether you're trading stocks or collectibles, you've got believers and skeptics. Either way, if you'd had the foresight back then, even one good Charizard would've turned that $1,000 into life-changing money.
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