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CN PodcastEP 75
eBay rejected GameStop’s Takeover Proposal… What this means for the hobby
5/15/202636:27
/ ABOUT THIS EPISODE
Ryan Alford and Brian Ludden are back to talk about what is actually changing in the hobby — not just on the surface, but underneath it.
This episode covers the hobby’s messy pricing reality, the limits of public comps, eBay’s evolving card tools, Beckett’s rebrand, PSA’s huge grading volume, and why old-school collection habits are about to collide with better software. Along the way, Ryan and Brian connect the dots between collector behavior, product design, and the bigger opportunity sitting in collection management and hobby infrastructure.
It is part hobby conversation, part business conversation, and part look ahead at the systems that could shape how collectors buy, track, value, and move cards in the years ahead.
Topics Covered
God Packs and hobby randomness
GameStop vs eBay and hobby platform power
Why eBay pricing data is useful but still incomplete
How off-platform sales distort true market value
Beckett’s visual update and what it may foreshadow
PSA submission scale and grading consistency questions
The shift from notebooks and spreadsheets to smarter collection tools
Ryan Alford and Brian Ludden on what collectors will need next
/ MORE EPISODES
EP 79Inside the Allocation Chaos, Record Sales, and Sourcing Pressure in Today’s Hobby
EP 78The Luxury Upgrade Cards Have Been Missing | Brian Pirrip & M1nt
EP 77What PSA Hiring 1,000 Graders and Expansion Will Mean For the Hobby
EP 76Tyler “T-Pott” Nethercott: Why Grading Is More Inconsistent Than Collectors Want to Admit | Sports Card Investor
EP 74Pristine Auction: Why $1 No-Reserve Auctions Are Changing the Hobby
