What Is Card Radar?
Card Radar tracks Pokemon card, sealed product, and PSA slab prices so collectors can spot market movement with more context.
Most price tools tell you what something costs right now. Card Radar focuses on what is changing. We collect price snapshots over time, compare recent movement across multiple windows, and turn that activity into simple signals collectors can scan quickly.
How Card Radar Reads The Market
We do not score items by price alone. A $500 card can be quiet, and a $20 card can be breaking out. The strongest signals usually come from a mix of meaningful price movement, recent activity, and clean direction.
Current prices are compared against recent checkpoints so a move has context.
Frequent meaningful changes suggest an item is actually moving, not just drifting.
Steady movement scores differently than one noisy jump that quickly stalls out.
Recent highs, lows, pullbacks, and PSA premiums help explain the signal.
Price Alerts
Watching every card manually gets old fast. Card Radar lets collectors set target prices for raw cards, sealed products, and PSA slabs, then get notified when an item reaches the price they care about.
Your Collection
Collectors can save cards, products, and PSA slabs to their account, including grade and price paid where it matters. That turns market movement into personal context: what you own, what it is worth now, and what changed.
What We Track
Card Radar follows raw Near Mint cards, sealed Pokemon products, and PSA slab values where reliable graded data is available. Each item can show current price, recent movement, 30-day highs and lows, pullbacks from recent peaks, and PSA 10 premiums when we have a verified match.
How The Signals Work
We compare an item's current price against recent checkpoints like 24 hours, 3 days, 7 days, and 30 days. Then we look at the shape of the movement: how active it has been, whether price is rising or falling, whether the move is steady, and whether it is near a recent high.
What Pulse Means
Pulse is our shorthand for market behavior. It is not just a list of the most expensive cards. A strong Pulse usually needs both activity and meaningful price movement. Items are grouped into plain-language stages: Surging, Accelerating, Moving, Pulling Back, and Drifting.
How Deals Are Different
The Deals page is not a Pulse leaderboard. It looks for active cards and products trading below their recent highs. Something can be moving up and still appear as a deal if it remains meaningfully below its 90-day high.
How PSA Data Helps
For graded cards, we compare raw Near Mint values against PSA 10 prices. The multiplier and premium can show where grading creates a large gap, while reported sales help add context. A huge multiplier with very little reported activity should be read differently than a strong multiplier with steady demand.
Why Collectors Use It
Card Radar brings price movement, activity, pullbacks, set context, alerts, and collection tracking into one place. It is built to help collectors notice changes faster, compare opportunities more clearly, and avoid relying on a single price point without context.
Card Radar is informational market tracking, not financial advice. We use pricing and provider-reported data as signals, but collectors should still check listings, sales history, condition, liquidity, and their own goals before buying or selling.
