“Operation Grayskull”

I woke at the crack of dawn to tidy my hotel room a bit since today was cleaning day. I had to get this done early since I had to be across town for a very early session of Masters Of The Universe:

Yes my friends, I saw it again. It wasn’t in the super fancy cinema of two weeks ago (I’ve been here two weeks?!?), instead I saw it in this cozy little one that only had about 75 seats:

All the trailers were different, and the last one before the film seemed like a sushiro advert starring Grogu but never actually mentioned the restaurant so I think it was just supposed to be a cute trailer for his film?!?

He Man was even better the second time around. I sat there with a giant grin during the entire film and even laughed at the jokes I saw coming. Afterwards I realized the last time I saw a movie twice at a cinema was over twenty years ago (Episode III) which says something about how much I like this film. It’s so well suited to the big screen that I feel sorry for those that haven’t seen it in the cinema. Twice.

Afterwards I played a few retro games in a strangely empty Mikado game center in Ikebukuro, before returning to Akihabara and doing the same in much busier arcades 🙂

I’ve been focusing on the more modern shooters – including a few indie ones – that Hirose has in the multcabs. They’re an absolute joy to play because the machines have top-of-the-line joysticks and buttons. I’d love to have something like this at home…

Tomorrow is my last full day, so I spent a lot of time packing tonight to gauge space and weight. I don’t have much space left and there’s still a few key purchases on my list. I suppose I’ll just somehow have to make it fit 🙂

Japan Extra: Cards

A bit of a specific post today: I wanted to see the most expensive trading card game cards I could find in card shops. This was an unexpectedly difficult exercise because most shops don’t sort out the pricey cards and just leave them in mysterious order in glass cases that look like this:

So it’s very likely I missed some.

Before I begin some simple rules. First I’m only doing game cards, so the above $3700 Dragonball Z card that came with a restaurant meal doesn’t count.

And neither does the above $12,500 set of trading cards that were lottery prizes, also for Dragonball Z.

Secondly, I’m only (obviously) including ones I personally saw and could photograph. There may have been more expensive YuGiOh cards in a case, but it had some sort of film on the glass making photography difficult!

So let’s begin, in (roughly) price order:

The Hololive card game hasn’t generated much excitement in the west, and even here in Japan I saw cards in few stores. The above was the most expensive I could find, at only about $50.

An even less common game as far as cards sold by secondary market stores goes is Wixoss, but this card at about $160 is apparently desirable to someone.

I’m fascinated by Duel Masters since to me it had the prettiest card and fanciest card treatments of any game but the cards have almost no value. Amazingly flashy holographic, etched foil cards go for under $1, and despite a good search the most expensive I could find was the above at $280!

One Piece was super popular here a year ago, but very much seems to have cooled off and it’s in fewer than half the stores, and even then the displays are small. I’m sure there’s cards out there selling for more than $560, but I didn’t see them.

Lorcana seems much more popular here than in the west, and I see it in about half the stores. Even so, $1600 is a pretty penny for a card from such a game. The store I saw this at had four of them, all at the same price. Even serialized Magic cards rarely fetch this amount!

I’ll put these two Cardfight Vanguard examples here although they somewhat break the rules since they’re not true game cards, but prizes that were awarded to tournament winners. At $1100 and $2000, that store had better hope a Vanguard player with very deep pockets – if they even exist – hears about these.

The most expensive YuGiOh card I saw was this one at about $1700, but this was in a case with dozens of other cards very close in price. I was surprised, since I had read YuGiOh didn’t have a strong secondary market.

Here’s one from the Dragonball card game. $820 for a single card for a game few play anymore. Who’s going to pay that?

Before I get to the two big ones – and you can predict the games – here’s a surprise. This is for the Kamen Rider Ganba Legends arcade game I played yesterday. Each time you play – which costs ¥100 – you get a card. Imagine one of them being ‘worth’ over $300!

Incidentally cards are big here now. I mean they’ve always been a popular hobby, but even small rinkydink shops are busy, and packs for recent expansions are sold out everywhere. You also rarely find booster packs in convenience shops anymore, probably because they sell out immediately.

So on to the two priciest examples:

A graded autographed alpha Black Lotus from Magic The Gathering can be yours for about $100,000 if you’re interested. If the gesde or autograph doesn’t interest you, the same shop had four other Lotuses from $40,000 and up.

Some of you will say graded cards don’t count (since they artificially add value in many peoples eyes) and that’s a fair point, so here’s a $6,000+ Mox Sapphire also from Magic. In fact this store had the complete ‘power nine’ which could be yours for about $28,000!

Here’s a $50,000 Pokemon card, although again it’s graded so some may call foul. Graded cards are rare here – many stores won’t touch them – but I saw this at a shop that only deals in graded cards and had many Pokemon examples for not much less than this.

At $9300, this was the highest ungraded Pokemon card I saw. There’s lots of pricey ($5000+) Pokemon cards right now, which probably befits the worlds most popular TCG.

Some crazy prices here wouldn’t you agree? Even crazier is many of these will sell, and the shops (like Big Magic, Haruheya and Mandarake) largely had different stock than when I was here in a January. And as I said, there’s probably even pricier ones in cases I just missed. Actually there’s so many card shops in Akiba alone I didn’t even go into all of them!

But I’ll end with this:

That’s a sign in Mandarake offering to pay $53,000 for a certain extremely rare Pokemon card. This means they have a buyer lined up, to which im sure they’ll sell for even more…

Akihabara Shopping

For reasons not known to any man, Burger King’s full menu here seems to be always available. So my breakfast was a Whopper Jr meal! This was during a walk to Ueno, where I was heading to check out a toy store.

I saw the above sign (it’s about a foot square) outside a building. It reads ‘Kanda Fire Department‘. Imagine a fire department using such a sign in the USA or Australia!

I didn’t find much at the toy store I hadn’t already seen elsewhere, but in the building next door where I went to check for stuff for KLS I saw these fruit tarts at a small booth. They were big and about $25 each. I bet they’re tasty!

That’s me playing Kamen Rider Ganba Legends and yes, I brought my cards and ‘Rider License’ with me from home so I could update my records and raise my level. I sat and played this for a while and dreamt of a world where the USA had games like this in arcades.

Returning to Akihabara it was – finally! – time for some extremely focused shopping. I had specific things on my list to search for, and now was the time. The crowds seemed thinner today – possibly due to the heat – and I was in rare form.

When I’m by myself shopping – either here or NYC or Australia – I try and be as efficient as possible, covering the most space in the shortest time and minimizing breaks. Here in Japan where crowds can get silly, it’s like I’m playing a bullet hell shooter as I navigate through all the people. I know my ‘hitbox’ down to the millimeter and as I contort myself at high speed to avoid touching or inconveniencing anyone else I probably look like this to an observer:

But I’m ok with that since it means I can get from A to B faster than humanly possible. That was especially true today because if there’s one thing you always find in Akiba these days it’s slooooooow tourists.

So I shopped and shopped, and played some video games and through money into crane games with nothing (yet!) to show. I bought many cool things, but didn’t find any grails. Not that I expected to, but a man can hope. Besides, I hit a jackpot already in Osaka 😉

The above photo is taken in Mandarake’s new third Akihabara store. They have an entire floor dedicated to ‘keshi’, which are those little figurines made of rubber. I love that there’s enough of a collector community to warrant such a thing. That store is at least half-museum and I spent a fair amount of time today flicking through their VHS tapes, Laserdiscs and shitajiki fondly remember anime from 30+ years ago.

This lemon ice is my new favourite snack, and I’m trying to eat as many as possible these last few days I’m here. My body is entirely ruined and only sugar is keeping me going, so this thing – which is great agains the heat and (I’m sure) loaded with sugar – is a miracle!

Tomorrow I’ve got a mad plan. Will I go through with it? Wait and see…