Agent-almanac manage-tcg-collection
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/i18n/caveman/skills/manage-tcg-collection" ~/.claude/skills/pjt222-agent-almanac-manage-tcg-collection-25edc1 && rm -rf "$T"
i18n/caveman/skills/manage-tcg-collection/SKILL.mdManage TCG Collection
Organize, inventory, and value a trading card game collection with structured tracking, proper storage, and data-driven valuation.
When to Use
- Starting a new collection and setting up inventory tracking from the beginning
- Cataloging an existing collection that has grown beyond casual knowledge
- Valuing a collection for insurance, sale, or estate purposes
- Managing want-lists and trade binders for acquiring specific cards
- Deciding which cards to submit for professional grading based on value potential
Inputs
- Required: Card game(s) in the collection (Pokemon, MTG, FaB, Kayou, etc.)
- Required: Collection scope (entire collection, specific sets, or specific cards)
- Optional: Current inventory system (spreadsheet, app, physical binder organization)
- Optional: Collection goal (complete sets, competitive play, investment, nostalgia)
- Optional: Budget for storage and grading supplies
Procedure
Step 1: Establish the Inventory System
Set up a tracking system appropriate to the collection's size.
- Choose an inventory method based on collection size:
Collection Size Guide: +-----------+-------+-------------------------------------------+ | Size | Cards | Recommended System | +-----------+-------+-------------------------------------------+ | Small | <200 | Spreadsheet (Google Sheets, Excel) | | Medium | 200- | Dedicated app (TCGPlayer, Moxfield, | | | 2000 | PokeCollector, Collectr) | | Large | 2000+ | Database + app combo with barcode scanning | +-----------+-------+-------------------------------------------+
- Define the data fields to track for each card:
- Identity: Set, card number, name, variant (holo, reverse, full art)
- Condition: Raw grade estimate (NM, LP, MP, HP, DMG) or numeric grade
- Quantity: How many copies owned
- Location: Where the card is stored (binder page, box label, graded slab)
- Acquisition: Date acquired, price paid, source (pack, purchase, trade)
- Value: Current market value at condition, last updated date
- Set up the chosen system with these fields
- Establish an update cadence (weekly for active collectors, monthly for stable collections)
Expected: A functional inventory system with defined fields, ready for data entry. The system matches the collection's scale — not over-engineered for a small collection, not under-powered for a large one.
On failure: If the ideal app isn't available for your game/platform, use a spreadsheet. The format matters less than consistency. A simple spreadsheet updated regularly beats a sophisticated app abandoned after a week.
Step 2: Catalog the Collection
Enter existing cards into the inventory system.
- Sort cards physically before entering digitally:
- By set (all cards from one set together)
- Within set, by card number (ascending)
- Variants grouped with their base card
- Enter cards into the system:
- Use bulk entry where available (barcode scanning, set checklists)
- Record condition honestly — over-grading your own cards leads to valuation errors
- Note any cards with special provenance (signed, first edition, tournament prizes)
- For large collections, work in sessions:
- Process one set or one storage box per session
- Mark progress clearly (which boxes/binders are done)
- Verify a random sample from each session for accuracy
- Cross-reference against set checklists to identify completion percentages
Expected: Every card in the collection entered with accurate condition and location data. Completion percentages known for each set being collected.
On failure: If the collection is too large for manual entry, prioritize: enter all rare/valuable cards first, then bulk-enter commons by set with estimated quantities. An 80% accurate inventory is far better than no inventory.
Step 3: Organize Physical Storage
Store cards appropriately for their value and use.
- Apply the storage tier system:
Storage Tiers: +----------+---------------+----------------------------------------------+ | Tier | Card Value | Storage Method | +----------+---------------+----------------------------------------------+ | Premium | >$50 | Top-loader + team bag, or penny sleeve in | | | | magnetic case. Stored upright in a box. | | Standard | $5-$50 | Penny sleeve + top-loader or binder with | | | | side-loading pages. | | Bulk | <$5 | Row box (BCW 800-count or similar), sorted | | | | by set. No individual sleeves needed. | | Graded | Any (slabbed) | Upright in graded card box. Never stack heavy.| +----------+---------------+----------------------------------------------+
- Environmental controls:
- Store in a cool, dry, dark location (not attic, not basement)
- Avoid direct sunlight, humidity, and temperature swings
- Use silica gel packets in storage boxes for moisture control
- Label everything:
- Each box labeled with contents (set name, card range, date stored)
- Each binder page corresponds to inventory location codes
- Graded cards labeled with inventory ID matching digital system
- Update the inventory system with storage locations
Expected: Every card stored appropriately for its value with location data in the inventory. Premium cards are protected, bulk cards are organized and accessible.
On failure: If premium storage supplies aren't available immediately, penny sleeves + top-loaders are always the minimum for any card worth >$10. Upgrade storage as supplies become available; the priority is getting valuable cards into some form of protection.
Step 4: Value the Collection
Calculate current market values.
- Choose a pricing source:
- TCGPlayer Market Price: Most common for US market (MTG, Pokemon)
- CardMarket: Standard for European market
- eBay Sold Listings: Best for rare/unique items without standard pricing
- PSA/BGS Price Guide: For graded cards specifically
- Update values for all Standard and Premium tier cards
- For bulk cards, use per-set bulk pricing rather than individual lookups
- Calculate collection summary:
Collection Value Summary: +------------------+--------+--------+ | Category | Count | Value | +------------------+--------+--------+ | Graded cards | | $ | | Premium ungraded | | $ | | Standard cards | | $ | | Bulk cards | | $ | +------------------+--------+--------+ | TOTAL | | $ | +------------------+--------+--------+
- Identify grading candidates: cards where the grade-premium exceeds grading costs
- Rule of thumb: grade if (expected graded value - raw value) > 2x grading cost
Expected: A current valuation of the collection with per-card values for significant cards and aggregate values for bulk. Grading candidates identified.
On failure: If pricing data is stale or unavailable, note the pricing date and source. For very rare cards, check multiple sources and use the median. Never rely on a single outlier sale.
Step 5: Maintain and Optimize
Establish ongoing collection management routines.
- Regular updates (match cadence from Step 1):
- Enter new acquisitions immediately
- Update values for Premium tier quarterly, Standard tier semi-annually
- Re-assess storage tier as values change
- Want-list management:
- Maintain a list of desired cards with maximum prices
- Cross-reference want-list against trade binder inventory
- Set price alerts where supported by the inventory app
- Collection analytics:
- Track total value over time (monthly snapshots)
- Monitor set completion percentages
- Identify concentration risk (too much value in one card/set)
- Periodic audit (annually):
- Physical count vs. inventory count for a random sample
- Verify storage conditions (check for humidity, pest damage)
- Review and update grading candidates based on current values
Expected: A living collection management system that stays current and supports informed decisions about buying, selling, grading, and trading.
On failure: If maintenance lapses, prioritize: update Premium tier values first, then catch up on new acquisitions. The most important thing is knowing what your most valuable cards are worth today.
Validation Checklist
- Inventory system established with appropriate data fields
- All cards cataloged with condition and location data
- Physical storage matches card value tiers
- Environmental controls in place (cool, dry, dark)
- Collection valued with current market prices and dates
- Grading candidates identified with cost/benefit analysis
- Maintenance cadence established and followed
- Want-list maintained for acquisition targets
Common Pitfalls
- Over-grading own cards: Collectors consistently rate their own cards 1-2 grades higher than reality. Be honest or use
for structured assessmentgrade-tcg-card - Ignoring bulk: Bulk cards accumulate value collectively. A box of 800 commons at $0.10 each is $80 — worth tracking
- Poor storage environment: Humidity and temperature swings damage cards faster than handling. Environment matters more than sleeves
- Stale valuations: Card markets move. A valuation from 6 months ago may be wildly inaccurate, especially around set releases or ban announcements
- No backup: Digital inventory without backup is fragile. Export to CSV monthly. Photograph premium cards for insurance
Related Skills
— Structured card grading for accurate condition assessmentgrade-tcg-card
— Deck construction using the collection inventorybuild-tcg-deck