Agent-almanac manage-tcg-collection

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/manage-tcg-collection" ~/.claude/skills/pjt222-agent-almanac-manage-tcg-collection-8c6082 && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/manage-tcg-collection/SKILL.md
source content

Manage 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.

  1. 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 |
+-----------+-------+-------------------------------------------+
  1. 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
  2. Set up the chosen system with these fields
  3. 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.

  1. 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
  2. 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)
  3. 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
  4. 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.

  1. 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.|
+----------+---------------+----------------------------------------------+
  1. 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
  2. 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
  3. 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.

  1. 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
  2. Update values for all Standard and Premium tier cards
  3. For bulk cards, use per-set bulk pricing rather than individual lookups
  4. Calculate collection summary:
Collection Value Summary:
+------------------+--------+--------+
| Category         | Count  | Value  |
+------------------+--------+--------+
| Graded cards     |        | $      |
| Premium ungraded |        | $      |
| Standard cards   |        | $      |
| Bulk cards       |        | $      |
+------------------+--------+--------+
| TOTAL            |        | $      |
+------------------+--------+--------+
  1. 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.

  1. 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
  2. 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
  3. Collection analytics:
    • Track total value over time (monthly snapshots)
    • Monitor set completion percentages
    • Identify concentration risk (too much value in one card/set)
  4. 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
    grade-tcg-card
    for structured assessment
  • 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

  • grade-tcg-card
    — Structured card grading for accurate condition assessment
  • build-tcg-deck
    — Deck construction using the collection inventory