What does the Kabuto Kang say about 21st century economics?The phenomenon of Kabuto King explained:- anonymous TCG collector who appears out of nowhere in August 2025- opens an account on X with one mission- collect every 1st edition Kabuto in existenceSeptember 2025- hits 1,042 copies by mid September- the card is common, printed in huge volumes but he keeps draining supplyNovember 2025- posts on November 26 go viral with 11.5M views- prices for 1st edition Kabuto pump from $2–5 to over $10 for the first time- ungraded cards listed at $20+ appear on eBay because he keeps removing supply- graded copies also pump: PSA 10 1st editions move from ~$110 to ~$139- August to November price growth hits +267%The Kabuto Movement (?)- thousands start sharing old Kabuto cards they find in drawers- TCG collectors argue it is pure hobby passion- crypto users compare it to NFT whale concentrationBut is this bullish for NFTs?- one person holding hundreds of copies creates artificial scarcity- the situation is similar to early NFT collections where whales held 20–40% of supplytoday the Kabutp King holds 1,748+ Kabuto cardsIs this a real case to compare with the old NFT days?
>>522598588OP, this is based. Thank you for sharing.
So what OP is speaking to is that the avg person is so unconfident on our overprinted fiat, that BTC, Pogeymon cardboard, and many more alternative ways to collect wealth appear.Within those: small meme movements JUST like this will occur.You can do your own. Magic the Gathering is a 30 year old game with the same shit, the racist cancelled cards spike in value. Dandan.
I literally did this with authentic pre-British Nepalese Khukuri. The type engraved on the spine in Sanskrit. I have a whole safe of them, I just keep buying any worthwhile ones to take them off the market. When I started they were like $100, now you can't find one for less than $500.
>>522601221You never did this
>>522602837I did I have posted a large number of them here too. Look in the archive, every one of those posts is from me.