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Home » Why Pokémon Collectors and Sociology Professors Are Buying the Same Cards Right Now
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Why Pokémon Collectors and Sociology Professors Are Buying the Same Cards Right Now

Melissa BridwellBy Melissa BridwellMay 13, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Why Pokémon Collectors and Sociology Professors Are Buying the Same Cards Right Now
Why Pokémon Collectors and Sociology Professors Are Buying the Same Cards Right Now
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I first noticed the overlap when a graduate student had two stacks of cards on the table in a coffee shop close to a university library. One stack contained plastic-sleeved Pokémon. The other featured heavy-ink drawings of Karl Marx, Durkheim, and Du Bois, each with a row of statistics that ran down the side like an old baseball card. There was little ceremony as she moved between them. It was difficult to ignore.

That little scene conveys a greater message about the subtle intersection of research and collecting. Nearly thirty years after their initial release, Pokémon cards are once again in high demand; according to Card Ladder, a sample of almost 10,000 cards saw growth of about 170%. Booster boxes that are sealed are selling for $250,000 and more. In the meantime, Theory Trading Cards, which are illustrated decks of classical thinkers with statistics like Influence: 99 and Optimism: 12, have become increasingly popular in sociology classrooms. The style is freely appropriated. It serves a different purpose. Strangely, the audiences are beginning to resemble each other.

FieldDetail
Trend NameTheory Trading Cards meet Pokémon resurgence
Year It Crossed Over2025–2026
Closest Cultural CousinPokémon, baseball cards, Magic: The Gathering
Common Sociology FiguresMarx, Durkheim, Weber, Du Bois, Goffman, Comte
Famous Pokémon Card CitedGrey-felt-hat Pikachu, valued near $2,800 per copy
Reported Market GrowthPokémon card index up roughly 170% over the past year
Highest Sealed Box Prices$250,000 to $400,000 and climbing
Grading AuthorityPSA, scoring cards 1 through 10
Format OverlapIllustrated figure, stat block, quote, era, school of thought
Learning MechanismActive recall, metacognition, repetition
Audience CrossoverUndergrads, AP students, grad TAs, millennial investors
Notable AdoptionLumen Learning modules, Quizlet decks, classroom kits
Common ComplaintScalping, resale bubbles, kids priced out of the hobby
Tracking ToolsCard Ladder, Collectr apps
Cultural Reference Point90s anime nostalgia meets graduate seminar reading lists

Both communities seem to be pursuing the same emotion, which is the tiny, recurring thrill of opening, sorting, ranking, and remembering. That excitement has turned into money for Pokémon collectors. Simply Collectibles’ Andres Fernandez compared the pastime to gold or a Rolex and spoke almost romantically about tearing a $5 pack in the hopes of finding a $100 card. It’s cognitive for sociology students. Although most students give up by the third stack, flashcards are effective because they require active recall. Theory cards have a longer lifespan because they appear valuable.

The way the two worlds unknowingly borrow each other’s language is fascinating. A collector of Pokémon discusses grading, condition, and scarcity. A sociology teaching assistant discusses the time period, the school of thought, and the classic quotation. Figures are being arranged into hierarchies by both. Each of them is placing a wager that the item in their possession will increase in value, either monetarily or in terms of memories.

Why Pokémon Collectors and Sociology Professors Are Buying the Same Cards Right Now
Why Pokémon Collectors and Sociology Professors Are Buying the Same Cards Right Now

But the shadows are not the same. In some areas, the Pokémon boom has become ugly. The Guardian reported on kids not being able to locate cards on shelves, resellers threatening Bath store owners, and opaque online raffles taking the place of straightforward purchases. BathTCG’s owner, Ben Thyer, was forced to discontinue selling complete booster boxes. Influencers who open packs live create a dopamine loop that most consumers are unable to replicate. The sociology version might escape this fate just because no Weber card is being flipped for rent. However, once the broader trading-card culture takes hold, it’s still unclear if academic collectibles remain pure.

The peculiarity of the bridge is what sticks with me. It makes sense that a generation of graduate students who grew up with Pokémon, anime cards, and digital character sheets would turn Marx into a stat block. Pikachu in a grey felt hat appears to be valued at $2,800 by investors. Professors seem to think that studying Durkheim in large print is worthwhile for a semester. In the end, both groups are paying for the same thing: a tiny printed item that claims to slightly organize the world.

Pokémon Sociology Professors
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Melissa Bridwell

    Melissa Bridwell is a Professor at Cambridge University and Senior Editor at theorycards.org.uk, where she writes about Theory Trading Cards, David Gauntlett's iconic sociology card series, and the thinkers who shaped modern cultural and media theory. Melissa brings both scholarly accuracy and sincere passion to every piece she writes. She has a strong academic foundation and a contagious enthusiasm for the nexus of ideas and collectibles. Her writing brings complex theory to life and makes it worthwhile, whether she is deciphering the philosophy behind a Foucault card or following Bell Hooks' cultural legacy.

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