Are Magic Cards Available At Gamestop?

GameStop offers a wide range of trading cards for various games, including Magic: The Gathering, Pokemon, Yu-Gi-Oh, and various sports like football, basketball, and baseball. Customers can start their collection by ordering online for delivery or pick-up in a store near them. Graded Magic: The Gathering Cards are available in gem mint condition, and the company is willing to buy it all.

GameStop has been a popular destination for purchasing graded cards from various games, but it is reportedly favoring one game. The company also offers great deals on packs and bundles, and Power Up Rewards members receive $5 monthly for purchases. GameStop does price matching, and customers can purchase items like an aftermath collector booster for $14 after tax.

GameStop also offers a vast collection of new and used video games, consoles, accessories, and collectibles at fantastic prices. However, Polygon, a company that reached out to multiple GameStop store locations, reported that they are only buying cards for $500 or less. To start your collection, customers can visit GameStop’s website for all their Magic: The Gathering needs.


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Are old Yu-Gi-Oh cards legal?

Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG cards can be found by searching for their release date on the Products page or using the Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG Card Database. Certain products may be released at different dates in different regions. Reprinted cards from previously released products remain tournament legal regardless of the new product’s release date. Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG cards in English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, and Portuguese can be played in any TCG territory, while cards in Japanese, Korean, Chinese, or “Asian English” are only legal for use in Asian territories.

Are Magic cards worth money?

Magic: The Gathering (MTG) cards are valuable collectibles that can bring in thousands of dollars during resale. The value of MTG cards depends on factors such as rarity, condition, popularity, and current market demand. Older cards, particularly those from early sets, can be worth a lot of money, especially if they are rare or in high demand. Some early sets can sell for thousands of dollars, but the value depends on the specific characteristics and current market conditions. Using a detailed guide can help you profit the most from selling MTG cards and maximize your profits.

What stock are Magic cards?
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What stock are Magic cards?

Magic cards have been printed on a card stock called Corona, which is produced in three factories: Arjowiggins in France, Kohler in Germany, and USPC in the USA. The cheaper domestically available stock is significantly lower quality and is more prone to delamination, curling, and ink failure due to lack of porosity.

Quality issues have been reported with new sets, with thinner paper and lower quality card stock. The card stock thickens and stiffens with time and humidity, causing cards with longer open periods to have a different feel than fresh ones. In 2017, reports increased about warped, bowed, and curved cards, affecting foil and regular cards in certain areas. Wizards of the Coast president Chris Cocks acknowledged these complaints and emphasized that the quality of Magic’s card stock is a combination of fast, cheap, and good quality.

Why is Black Lotus banned?
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Why is Black Lotus banned?

The Power Nine card, known for its power and limited print, is banned from most competitive Magic formats due to its power and scarcity. The only competitive setting where it is not banned is the “Vintage” format, where only one copy is allowed. The card was omitted from Revised Edition and none have been published in any subsequent set. Its power and limited print have made it the most expensive Magic card, with mint condition Alpha cards being among the most valued.

Publisher Wizards of the Coast stated that the card would not be reprinted, which would hurt its value among collectors. The 30th Anniversary set published by Wizards of the Coast in 2023 reprinted 15 cards from the original set, including Black Lotus, which are proxy cards with unique backs and use a modern card frame instead of the classic frame from the original version.

Are Magic 30 cards legal?

The 30th Anniversary Edition of Magic cards represents a collectible item commemorating 30 years of Magic. It should be noted that these cards are not permitted in any officially sanctioned Magic: The Gathering format and feature a distinct back design. The financial implications and accessibility of the 30th Anniversary Edition on MTGO or Magic Arena remain unconfirmed.

What is the most rare magic card?
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What is the most rare magic card?

Magic: The Gathering cards, including the Black Lotus, have become highly valuable over the years. The Black Lotus gives players three mana of a single color when tapped, costs nothing to play, and can be used as an interrupt. The Alpha Set of Magic: The Gathering cards has become extremely valuable, with even common cards worth several thousands of dollars. Some of the rarest and most valuable cards, such as the Shichifukujin Dragon and the 1996 World Champion, are considered priceless and not for sale.

Dual lands like Taiga and Tundra are highly sought-after and can sell for thousands of dollars, providing versatility and power to decks using multiple card colors. The Alpha set, which debuted on Aug. 5, 1993, has become extremely sought-after, with many cards worth thousands of dollars in today’s market. The Beta set, released in September 1993, also has cards worth thousands of dollars.

What cards will GameStop buy?

GameStop is currently accepting PSA-graded trading cards, offering a maximum payout of $1, 500 in cash or in-store credit. This provides a convenient and definitive resolution to trade offers.

Does GameStop buy Yugioh cards?
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Does GameStop buy Yugioh cards?

GameStop has begun buying high-grade PSA TCG and sports cards in some of its U. S. locations to capitalize on the robust market for collectibles. Some locations, excluding stores in certain states, are authorized to make cash or credit offers of up to $500 per card on PSA-graded cards rated an 8, 9, or 10. These offers are non-negotiable and employees are not allowed to haggle over price on the spot. The cards will be resold via GameStop’s website.

This new venture is a natural extension of GameStop’s business model of buying and selling used games. The move will not interfere with other games retailers’ businesses that already buy and sell TCG and sports card singles due to GameStop’s limitations on what cards they can buy or sell. GameStop’s new buying program may also help other singles card retailers by driving card sellers towards them. Customers can now get a baseline cash offer on their cards from GameStop, then seek help from more experienced singles card buyers at game stores if the offer price is too low.

Are Magic cards still popular?
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Are Magic cards still popular?

Magic: The Gathering (MTG) is a popular tabletop and digital collectible card game created by Richard Garfield. Released in 1993, it was the first trading card game and has around fifty million players as of February 2023. Over twenty billion Magic cards were produced between 2008 and 2016, generating over $1 billion in revenue annually. Players play as powerful dueling wizards called Planeswalkers, who draw cards from their deck representing magical spells to use in battle.

Instant and Sorcery cards represent one-time effects, while Creature, Artifact, Enchantment, and Battle cards provide long-term advantages. Players must also include resource or land cards to cast their spells. To defeat opponents, players must reduce their life totals to zero through combat damage or attacking creatures. The game has a unique gameplay that combines elements of traditional fantasy role-playing games with more complex rules and cards.

How many black lotuses are left?

The Black Lotus magic card, released in Magic the Gathering, was not widely used due to its rarity and lack of collectors. Around 5, 000 Black Lotus cards are still in sellable condition, with most being spoiled over time. The price of these cards has increased due to the growing awareness of their importance in the game. Outside of Magic the Gathering communities, it is believed that there will always be a surplus of Black Lotus cards in play. The state of the Black Lotus card market may change slightly if people manage to recover their previous collections. The Black Lotus MTG edition determines the number of copies produced.

Why are some Magic cards illegal?
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Why are some Magic cards illegal?

Magic cards are banned due to their power in their respective formats, and the complexity of Magic makes it difficult to predict how new cards interact with older ones. Racially or culturally offensive cards are also banned in all formats. If a card is on the restricted list for a specific format, only one copy can be used, including both the main deck and sideboard. Currently, only the Vintage format uses a restricted list.


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Are Magic Cards Available At Gamestop?
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  • As a former store manager for Gamestop, i can definitely sympathize with the staff. The company regularly would kick off new initiatives and expect employees to just know how to do it without adequate training. Please dont give employees a hard time with this, as it’s something that is completely foreign to a large portion of gamestop staff.

  • Leonhart, it would be a good deed if you went back to that GameStop same day of the week, time, and interacted with the same team member. Then sold over $200 in cards if not more and gave the cash to the guy. And to put a cherry on top, get his name, submit an excellent survey from the receipt, contact his manager, and then write corporate as well. He did awesome, had a good attitude, was willing to learn, patient, and offered to let you see his monitor.

  • i worked at game stop as a second job for over a year making 9.25 an hour. i rarely have time to finish my training let alone the new training that comes in every week. you have to ship online orders, deal with customers, keep the store clean, upsell warranties, upsell the new credit card, change the pricing labels, stock the incoming products, count every store item to make sure the inventory is correct, etc. and you usually have to do it alone. a manager will usually come into to help you catch up but he/she usually has multiple stores to manage because the turn over is so bad and the managers are overworked even harder because they get paid a more liveable wage

  • Former GS employee: You can blame corporate and management for no training. Fortunately, I worked in a GS who had a GREAT manager that ALWAYS wanted to be on the up and up on everything new to the company and always make sure we knew what we were doing. But I heard about other stores that did NOT offer training and just expected every to read GSO and the in-store emails and have a free for all on how to do anything. I wish they cared more like my manager did.

  • I think the employee did a great job. I just can’t imagine how much time it will take to do this if someone brings in like 100 graded cards. Most of the time, they only have 1 employee running the store. I don’t think they can open the 2nd register using the same employee ID (having 2 registers open with the same ID at the same time), so people would have to wait to check out. I don’t have any graded cards but it could be a good way to sell off some cards if the price is close to market value. Gamestop will definitely make a killing off this if they buy most cards for half of market value though.

  • I mean…I guess it’s fine if you really need the cash. The current system was rolled out way too fast and it’s unfair to employees for having zero training out of the gate with this. I give props to that GameStop employee because he even said he had no idea what he was doing and he was just going to try and wing it. He didn’t get angry or flustered, he worked til he got results, and he still had the ability to make some playful jokes even though it was extra work and he had zero training. It’s a shame their employees won’t get a bump in pay even though they now have to be experts in graded cards. And another issue I have is that it ONLY takes PSA (new ones at that). Sounds like an odd partnership and a way for PSA to get a WHOLE BUNCH of new submissions from people needing upgraded labels. And they don’t even take SGC, CGC, or BGS. This whole thing feels like it’s going to become an absolute dumpster fire.

  • Sounds like the manager on the phone was just reading off the check list, and had no idea how it was supposed to work with the system. I remember perusal one guy that was let into a GameStop corporate meeting phone call, and they sounded as though they have no idea what’s going on these days. They will destroy the collectible card market so fast in my opinion.

  • They make their money through high trade volumes. That’s why they buy cards at below market rate (50%-70%) and sell them at slightly below market rate (95%). They don’t want to hold onto the cards because it’s too risky. Instead, they focus on earning from the buying and selling process. They prioritize trade volume. Of course, they would only offer 50-70%. Why would they buy cards from you for 80-90%? They need to make a profit. If they bought a card for 80-90% and tried to sell it for just 5-15% more, they wouldn’t be able to cover operational costs such as store rent, worker wages, and other expenses.

  • This was a great employee. He was very pleasant and accepting of the challenge and caught on pretty quickly. I’m sure it’ll go smoothly for most of them. They’re nerdy people who work at GameStop who like to follow processes and what not. Sometimes they wrong though so mistakes will happen like any other job

  • Very interesting to see the process at the early stages. Definitely took a long time and I expect it would take even longer with proper examination of slabs. Pricing isn’t terrible for some of the newer less valuable cards it seems but would expect cards in the $200-$499 range to be valued very low for resale.

  • People think it’s just GameStop. American service and what companies want people to do to work for them and pay them just over broke with extreme draconian rules where if you mess up once, your gone. It’s so many managers and general managers of an area stealing games and cards. It’s so many cases it dont make sense. Game stop is good because of the business idea but the company is horrible in taking accountability of the losses it’s stores takes . Plus why would game stop be taking cards 8 or higher in grade ? They trying to make money to 😂. Pokemon os booming. Don’t let online influencers and sellers tell you otherwise. How come they not buying yugioh or sports card 😂. They could easily get into sports … Pokemon is easy to to resell and double your money . Just gotta have the collection. Id never sell anything to GameStop especially if you are always buying from them . Just a get over and way for them to suck up values Pokemon cards to resell on tcg or eBay

  • I collect vintage Barbie dolls from 59 to 1972, there is no grading system, you have to know everything to be able to ID a doll, and there is fake dolls too on the market. I Cant imagine going to a store and hoping the employee will know everything to give me a fair price. Even if the cards system is into the computer, I feel it is still scary, because obviously without formation and actual knowledge, some fake cards or what ever might end up in their possession. And if they resell them, its even more sketchy.

  • The whole point of graded cards is for future investment and nothing else. There literally is no other intended purpose for why it exists. So when you say half price is “not too bad” you are wrong. Completely. Especially when gamestop offers you a price that is what the card was worth ten years ago. Ten years of wasted built up value as a perfect example.

  • As someone that works at gamestop we really dont get any training for anything. The PSA cards are a brand new thing and not getting any training we look at them in store and when we send them out to where ever they go gamestop has hired people from PSA and they double check all cards! Shout out the employee I know how he feels lol.

  • I just can’t believe GameStop thinks that things like this is what will make them survive as a company. All it does is incentivize theft because no one who actually owns cards is going to accept 2 skittles and pack of bubble gum for their psa slabs like the meme that is GameStop’s trade in values. Combine that with the fact that this guy (however awesome he may be as an actual person) 100% being the typical I don’t give a fuck about customer service GameStop employee is why they will continue to fail and not be around in 5 years time.

  • While I do agree that it’s a silly idea for GameStop to be selling/buying graded cards. I think it’s important to note that this has not rolled out officially, and that creators should give these employees and managers a few weeks before deciding to film content to make said employees look incompetent.

  • I’m ngl the last time I even bought something In GameStop was a funko pop bc that is basically half there store now ans they had an exclusive I wanted so I traded in some article games to put towards it and that was the last time I think I’ve ever been in a GameStop I honestly thought they closed and everything they do is a scam like nobody in there right mind is buying there shit consoles and games which is all just more evidence that there glory days r long over

  • So considering you didn’t remove thw employee’s store or name or blur his face, downright doxing him, plus the sketchy filming here, I’m assuming you didn’t get permission to film him or to post him online, which is illegal? I was a article production major. They did put training out, but it was horribly minimal and way rushed. It’s way more than anyone can expect of any employee, but the fun part is, this article is liable to get this poor guy fired or at least written up for not following the training procedure. So for multiple reasons, this article should be removed, or at LEAST remove the dude’s face and address?? Without evidence of consent to post his likeness on like, this article is illegal.

  • Bro love you but, you should of told that guy ur doing this for a YouTube vid & u have a following… to at lease “try” to make it seem like he was checking them well… I understand, that’s “his job” & “what he’s supposed to do”, but cmon, it’s GameStop employees & yes, aware “it’s good vids like this come out so GameStop can do proper training”… I just hope the dude didn’t lose his job over this

  • The store had a date set to train the employees but this guy came in the day the news was released cause he knew stores weren’t going to be caught up yet. He came in knowing this wouldn’t go well but he did it for the sake of likes and views “content”. He didn’t even ask this man for consent to film him and publish his face online, while in a private business. He was secretly recording the situation with his phone and didn’t make it entirely obvious.

  • So the gist of the story is don’t sell to GameStop lol. Seems like they generally will give u a third of the value and or half of ur lucky but much lower for some of the more higher end cards. If I was in the need for some quick cash I would hit up an actual card store and try my luck. 🍀 if u go to the GameStop for some money if ur desperate maybe just sell the low end stuff because it won’t be as bad of a loss. Just saying what I would do if it was an emergency. Not financial advice.

  • They should set up a QR scanning kiosk off to the side so you can just scan and quote your cards (showing both trade and cash prices). That way, you can choose which cards you want to sell before getting in line, thus expediting the process. They could easily remotely update prices daily or even more frequently that way. What do y’all think?

  • You can tell that employee don’t care about his damn job, bro lmao. Already has the excuses when walking up to the register. He just wanted a smooth 8hr day and go home lmao Also, such a backhanded comment from that manager. “wish you would have done the training..” She didn’t have to say all that. Could have been a different conversation and worded differently.

  • I hope GameStop shuts down soon. We have plenty of other reliable resources for buying games, consoles, cards, and accessories for any of those things as well. GameStop has nonstop taking your money most of the time to sell you used products/refurbished on top of the the credit or cash they give you back for your expensive cards,games, or consoles is a rip off so they can keep GameStop alive. I stopped supporting GameStop for this reason. No offense to the employees I’m sure your good ppl just working your job trying to pay the bills.

  • Wow in this day and age people are going to take full advantage of this trading in fakes. They have no idea what one looks like and they are hard to spot sometimes. People can get cards graded. Crack open the slab when they get it home. Throw the sticker in a replica slab with a fake card and seal it and can do that like 30 times to every store in range in a day. $200-300 cards. Thats like 5-10k per store visit.

  • Why would you put an employee that hasn’t been trained to do something yet in a position that could result in him making a big mistake on article? You couldn’t go find another Gamestop where the employees were already informed and trained on the brand new TCG Trade-in service? Poor dude on camera stressed tf out trying not to make himself or the company look bad when he has no idea what he’s doing due to lack of training. I guess in the name of content people are just props and don’t really matter.

  • Is he really going by eBay prices? No thanks. That furisode girl is like $5 bucks tops ungraded (nm/m), graded it’s like $15/25 tops (9/10). Irida is $13 tops, ungraded (nm/m). Graded like around $20-30 (9/10). Beauty is like $3 tops, ungraded (nm/m). If i was a gamestop employee, i would go on tcg player and embarrass you for trying to over price your cards. Never go ebay.

  • I reckon they’ll probably give up trying this after it doesn’t pick up steam in stores. Just another corporate decision to try branching out into something they really shouldn’t be. Also, ofc they are reading off a script. What do you think most employees do when they learn a new process? As for “forcing underpaid workers to do this” argument… I mean… technically it’s no more of a process than what they already do. It really doesn’t add much to their duties once the process is learned. They don’t even have to be an expert. Hell, they already have to inspect game discs if you bring them in. Personally, I don’t see this process itself as a problem for employees. The biggest issue is corporate trying to get into the space when they have no business to, metaphorically and literally. If you all feel bad for the employees, don’t worry, I don’t see this going far.

  • Gamestop failed to train their employees and set their company up for success. Sad to see when most of us want them around and praise the Gamestop stock when it burns wall street shorts. It’s not the employees’ faults and he is lucky to have such a supportive manager while the store is slow. Imagine a store with a line of people as they’re trying to learn this daunting process. SMH. Not finished perusal this article, but dang… Gamestop low balling trade-ins again 😔

  • If you love graded Pokémon cards for cheap I guess theirs would be the job for you. Scan the cards and let the customer know what GameStop would pay but then offer to pay the customer more than what GameStop is offering 😂. You could probably make more money buying and selling those cards then your hourly wage at GameStop.

  • You really should’ve just brought 2 slabs to test this out, or you could’ve just walked out when he told you he didn’t know anything, didn’t know the process, no briefing or nothing and you still chose to stick it out, and watch this guy suffer for minimum wage. Wealthy people like you are really disconnected from society.

  • PSA please stop showing up to stores before they open. If you ever work retail you’d understand. When employees first come in they have so much to do in their daily checklist. You can see he was receiving shipment as he was doing this. Have a heart and stop doing this. Also stop selling your stuff to GameStop that company is the worst

  • This is awful. Its going to make it to where they will get an influx of slabs no one wants because the seller cant get rid of them because gamestop is sooooooooo late to the party for graded slabs that theyll be left with the bulk submissions no one wants. They need to take into account how many are in their population before they can accept a slab. Either that or limit slabs that arent valued $50 or above, so people will actually desire them. Thats the whole point of the TCG is that a card is desirable……gamestop will suffer financially from this. However it does create alot of people wanting to come look, so thats a big plus. I feel like it will cause the spark of alot more investors though, so its going to crumble the collecting scene. Lose/lose from my POV.

  • I can see this being an issue for fraud as these poorly trained employees probably aren’t going to be able to spot counterfeit graded cards. I just saw this story in Washington where 2 men sold over 2 million in counterfeit graded cards and a lot of those were to actual card shops. If they couldn’t spot the difference, I doubt GameStop employees could or would even care.

  • If gamestop were smart, they would have a few employees on payroll that specialize in the graded pokemon slabs. Then they would have a lot better chance of avoiding losses. I mean you cant expect some college kid who knoes nothing about these cards to just know if everything is authentic etc. im sure there is going to be some fakes and scams coming through. Especially if theybstatt accepting the old cert slabs with no code. Thats why as a company you have to train on this before throwing your employees to the wolves so to speak

  • This dude has to buy sell and trade games and now he has to become a little eBay power graded cards selling buying trading corporation all under the sky is of minimum wage while McDonald’s workers out here in Cali making 20 bucks an hour standing there picking their nose playing on their phone insane

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