Logan Paul May Have Dropped $3.5 Million On Fake 'Pokémon' Cards
Logan Paul, recently in the news for using his vast wealth towards angering ends, is in the news again, this time for using his vast wealth towards potentially hilarious ends.
Late last year, the Paul brother excitedly announced to the world that he had purchased $3.5 million of first-edition Pokémon cards. According to collectors in the know, the cards scream "fake."
On Christmas, YouTuber Rattle Pokémon uploaded the first of what would become several videos about the sketchiness of Paul's purchase. Over the course of his series, Rattle identified multiple problems with the box. The first was that it first came from an eBay seller in a listing that was riddled with errors, eliciting mistrust from potential buyers. One buyer did grab the box at a relatively paltry sum compared to what was being advertised, but the seller refused to let the buyer see the cards in person before purchase, so the buyer backed out.
According to Pokébeach, the seller also changed the story behind the box three different times, which was another significant red flag for potential buyers. Ultimately, the box landed in the hands of a buyer who had the cards verified with a company named Baseball Card Exchange, which, as the name might imply, did not have much experience verifying Pokémon cards. Some collectors predicted that the collection might end up getting "verified" by a little-known or inexperienced authentication company in order to give it some legitimacy, so the BBCE verification did little to persuade those following the case that the cards were legit. The box itself has raised significant concerns in the TCG community, as it has multiple discrepancies between itself and other supposedly 1st-edition sets of Pokémon cards.
Ultimately the cards were flipped by sellers multiple times before they reached Paul, the collection's highest-profile owner yet, which only upped the scrutiny on the box.
As the suspicions of a scam grew louder, Paul announced he would fly out to the BBCE to discuss the matter. On the plus side for Paul, if it turns out he was scammed out of millions of dollars, at least he'll get some good content out of it.
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PhasmaFelis
People are mocking this guy for spending $3.5 million on Pokemon cards that turned out to be fake, and I don't think that's right. We should be mocking him for spending $3.5 million on Pokemon cards at all.
Catboy#333
Logan Paul is legitimately fascinating by means of HOW stupid he is. He is like one of those boundary conditions in mathematics which get used to define certain extreme points in functions lmao. Is this what court jesters were like in the middle ages?
KoimanZX
Serves him right. The prick deserves to be scammed.
AnonBlah867
Literally what the actual fuck?
There are just over nine thousand (no joke, it's quite literally over 9,000) different Pokémon cards in existence. For spending $3.5 million on the game to be justified, the average single card would have to cost 380 dollars if you were buying them ALL.
While the pricing for packs appears to vary quite considerably, it seem evident that the average cost per card is well below one dollar, and not even the existence of the rarest cards could possibly justify the mean across all rarities coming anywhere near hundreds.
RemChi
Its just a scam either way.
Logan is notoriously bad with money.
Or.
YOu know, he just said he spent all that money on fake cards to grind up attention.