Author: Maelstrom
Compiled by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
In the crypto industry, projects that truly achieve "product-market fit beyond the crypto bubble," "generate genuine cash flow to reward holders," and are in a phase of rapid growth are rare. Collector Crypt (CARDS) is one such case. It tokenizes physical graded trading cards (primarily Pokémon cards) on the Solana blockchain and has built a complete financial infrastructure around it.
According to a deep analysis by Maelstrom Fund (CryptoHayes' family office), the project achieved approximately $53 million in annualized profit in May, with a run rate of about $109 million in June, while its current FDV is only around $550 million. Genuine profitability, real cash, actual rewards, and still in an early stage—these are the core attractions of the project.
Positive EV Collecting: How the Gacha Machine Creates a Win-Win Business Model
Most of Collector Crypt's profits come from the Gacha machine (a digital pack-opening system). The platform bulk-purchases physical trading cards at a 5%-15% discount. Users who open digital packs can choose to keep the cards or immediately sell them back to the platform at a 7%-15% discount to the market price.
Most users sell back the majority of common cards in pursuit of rare ones, forming a highly efficient business model: users get packs with an average positive EV of about 2%, while Collector Crypt captures a profit margin of approximately 4.5%.
Data shows that users aiming to build a $100,000 collection can, on average, obtain cards worth about $102,000. Beyond Gacha, users can also trade cards directly on the native secondary market. Since the native market's launch at the end of April, trading volume has rapidly increased, hitting highs of around $650,000 multiple times on a weekly basis.
Challenging eBay: Reconstructing a Trillion-Dollar Market with On-Chain Efficiency
Stablecoins have eaten into cross-border payments, Hyperliquid has eaten into 24/7 trading. Each time, it's about taking Web2's inefficient processes and making them 10 times better on-chain, profiting in the process. Collector Crypt is doing the same to the trading card market.
In Q1 2026, eBay achieved a record GMV of $22.2 billion and revenue of $3.1 billion, with collectibles being one of the fastest-growing categories. Most trading cards are still sold via eBay, where the total cost of selling a single Pokémon card can be as high as 16%-20% of the transaction price (including a 13.25% final value fee, fixed order fees, promotion fees, packaging, and shipping costs). This is a typical extractive marketplace structure with a heavy operational burden.
Collector Crypt is completely different: charging only a 2% fee, instant settlement, cards stored in insured custody, and one-click trading. This is not just cost reduction; it's a comprehensive upgrade of the user experience. Looking back, all of this will seem obvious in the future.
Impressive Metrics: From Gacha to Multiple Drivers
Taking a $1,000 pack as an example, Collector Crypt's comprehensive gross margin is about 5.14% (with 2% coming from user positive EV and 93% from buybacks), maintaining a net margin of approximately 4.44% even after incentives.
In May, the platform's annualized total revenue was about $1.2 billion, corresponding to Gacha profits of about $54 million; in June, it is on track for annualized total revenue of $2.4 billion and Gacha profits of $109 million. Beyond Gacha, future profits will also come from:
- Secondary market trading fees
- Revenue-sharing from projects built on the platform's infrastructure
- The eBay Sniper tool (allowing users to place maximum bids on eBay auctions using USDC)
The Gacha machine continuously brings physical inventory on-chain. The platform is moving towards the tipping point where on-chain liquidity competes with eBay, potentially triggering explosive growth in secondary trading activity and fee revenue.
Supply is Far Tighter Than FDV Suggests
The total supply is 2 billion tokens, but this number severely overestimates the actual circulating supply expected after all unlocks are completed by September 2027. Over 50% of the supply is allocated to the Foundation and Community, and most of it may never enter circulation.
Community portion: Used for incentive payments. 2.5% was distributed at TGE, followed by 0.75% distributed to users every three months. As the token price rises, the team will slow the distribution pace. Under an aggressive assumption, by September 2027, roughly half of the community supply might be in circulation.
Foundation portion: Used for future hiring and listings. Since the project is already profitable, this portion might remain untouched. Under an aggressive assumption, by September 2027, about 30% might enter circulation.
Even under the most aggressive assumptions, the effective circulating supply after all unlocks would only be about 1.3 billion tokens. Buying at the current $550 million FDV and holding until full unlocks is equivalent to buying at a valuation of approximately $360 million.
Buybacks Have Started, Cash Reserves are Ample
To date, Collector Crypt has accumulated approximately $23 million in trading card inventory and about $10 million in cash. This cash can be used for new growth opportunities as well as token buybacks.
Buybacks have already begun. On May 12th, the platform repurchased tokens worth $500,000 from a pre-seed investor via a custodied wallet, with a clear and verifiable process. The team has likely also cleared out some locked seed-round investors. Furthermore, since June 11th, the platform appears to have been making continuous purchases in the open market.
Liquidity Funds Still Excluded, Early Advantage Clear
Similar to Hyperliquid, Collector Crypt has adopted a DEX-first strategy, avoiding hefty listing fees for centralized exchanges. While trading volume has increased, it's still insufficient for large liquidity funds to establish significant positions. Early funds have started making OTC inquiries, but most fundamentally-oriented investors remain on the sidelines.
From 'Toy' to New Asset Class: The Door is Open for Institutional Participation
Collector Crypt is far from just a trading card company; it is building the financial infrastructure for an entirely new asset class. Trading cards and broader collectibles have become a high-performing asset class, yet institutional participation has been challenging.
Imagine a family office wanting to allocate $10 million to trading cards. Would they place ten thousand orders on eBay and ship them to their office? Obviously not. Collector Crypt enables such new participants to easily enter the market.
Watches, cars, wine, and other collectibles have long been ways for the wealthy to express status. For younger buyers, trading cards are becoming the trend. As intergenerational wealth transfer accelerates, trading cards have the potential to become the next mainstream collectible category.
The project currently has around 800 daily active users but already generates higher profits than many top companies in the crypto industry. The team is now expanding into more collectible categories like sports cards and penetrating the Web2 user base. It is already one of the most profitable companies in crypto, and it's just getting started.
Maelstrom Fund Target Price: Reach $4 by the end of summer. Collector Crypt is proving that true product-market fit isn't built on narratives, but on genuine cash flow and user value. As the migration from eBay to on-chain is just beginning, this project might be standing right at the forefront of the wave.






