On some weekends, Albuquerque experiences something subtly strange. On a Sunday, you might anticipate a regional sales conference or a wedding reception when you enter the Embassy Suites. Rather, there are binders full of Pokémon holofoils, tables covered in collector sleeves, and Magic: Funko Pops lined up with the kind of attention most people save for fine china, and the Gathering sets spread out like poker hands. Every stop the Cards and More Expo makes in New Mexico seems to generate a little more enthusiasm than the last.
This is not how it began. What started out as a modest event with a few vendors, folding tables, and perhaps a few hundred inquisitive locals has developed into something more akin to a true cultural weekend than a specialty event. In July 2025, dozens of enthusiasts attended the NM Card Show at the Marriott Uptown. Over a thousand people attended a two-day format by January 2025, according to the KOAT report. The 505 Card Show and the forthcoming Grailyard Card Show at the Albuquerque Railyards indicate that this is becoming a regular event on the city’s calendar rather than a fad.

It’s more difficult to identify what’s causing it than it seems. Money is obviously a part of it. The most expensive card that collectors like Quentin Santos have ever owned, an Arceus-style Go Palkia Altar graded PSA 10, was valued at about $2,500. It’s not a boast. For serious players in this field, that’s just Tuesday. Because buyers moved in, demand changed, and the market responded as markets do, cards that were selling for $1,000 a few months ago are now trading at $3,000. It resembles watching a small-cap stock move on a rumor in that it is speculative, erratic, and strangely thrilling.
However, a crucial event taking place on the convention floor is overlooked if all of this is reduced to investment returns. At the Cards and More Expo, vendor Marco Espinoza made it clear that this is about freedom. the capacity to leave a nine to five job, start something, and develop alongside like-minded individuals. These events seem to serve as both hobbyist get-togethers and unofficial business incubators. Albuquerque, which has never been recognized as a significant collector’s market, may be subtly evolving into one without anyone formally announcing it.
Dominic Cantu’s narrative effectively conveys the atmosphere. He began collecting for fun, just like most people do. He then gradually began flipping cards to finance additional purchases. His children now crack packs with him every night, making it a family business. The picture of a father and young children gathered around a brand-new booster pack is the kind of thing that doesn’t appear in investment analysis, but it probably explains the stickiness of the hobby better than any price chart could.
The Grailyard Card Show, which is sponsored by Duke City Games and is set for August 8 at the Albuquerque Railyards, may be the most obvious indication that this scene has crossed a certain threshold. The Railyards isn’t a ballroom in a hotel. It is a significant landmark. Selecting it conveys a sense of assurance that people will attend, that the event merits a larger stage, and that what began modestly has grown into something greater.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that cities with devoted collector communities tend to retain them. It’s still unclear if Albuquerque is at the start of that arc or has already passed it. However, it begins to feel less like a weekend pastime and more like a scene in the process of defining itself as vendors like Espinoza establish livelihoods here and collectors like Santos and Cantu treat this as something truly serious.
