People from Calgary have always been known for being practical. People there usually try to fix issues instead of whining about them. When organized crime groups started targeting trading card shops across the city, taking tens of thousands of dollars worth of goods in just minutes, some owners decided that better locks and a close examination of the security footage were no longer enough to keep the thieves away.
Even if you try not to be struck by the numbers, they are. In May 2026, Calgary police said they had arrested two people after a string of break-ins at several collectibles stores. More than $85,000 had been stolen. These people weren’t just taking a loose pack off the shelf because they could. The thieves were well-planned, well-coordinated, and sometimes very fast. For example, thieves in Abbotsford, B.C., stole $30,000 worth of Pokémon cards from a store in less than three minutes after removing the security grille with a car.
In light of this, at least one shop owner in Calgary has turned to facial recognition software and added it to their existing surveillance system to spot known criminals or suspicious repeat visitors before anything goes missing. Five years ago, this kind of move would have seemed like too much. It doesn’t sound too much anymore.

Something feels off about seeing this happen in a hobby that began as a game for kids. In Japan, Pokémon first came out in 1996, and for most of its life, it was always in school lunchrooms and box under beds. Then the pandemic happened, and celebrities like Logan Paul started opening cards in front of millions of viewers. Suddenly, having a first-edition holographic Charizard wasn’t just a nice thing to have; it was useful. A few really rare cards have gone for a lot of money. Some for more. Collectors, investors, and now thieves who know exactly what they’re looking at have all been drawn to the market.
That change has been very clear in Calgary. Thieves broke into ShoeBox Games & Cafe on Halloween while wearing skull masks. This is normal for October 31st, which is part of what made it smart. Taking boxes worth several hundred dollars each, they ran away. A customer named Daniel Cruz hit his head when he tried to stop them. Another local store, First Player, was hit twice in about a year. Someone broke into Olympic Sports Cards and Games early one morning and stole first-edition packs worth about $700 each from a glass display case. The store lost more than $5,000.
Recognition isn’t a perfect solution; anyone who says it isn’t hasn’t watched how well the technology works in stores with low lighting or thought about how thieves who are determined just send someone else. But it adds something that just surveillance footage couldn’t. Looking back at hours of video after the fact lets you know what took place. You can find out what might happen next with a live alert. That difference is more important than it seems for a small shop owner who can’t pay for private security and can’t be everywhere at once.
It’s still not clear how many shops in Calgary will use this technology or if city rules or concerns about privacy will make things more complicated. Because collecting is becoming more popular, some people are already afraid that they will be robbed at home as well as in stores. People who have a lot of things in their living room have also been thinking about this.
It’s clear that the business world has reached a turning point. It’s no longer enough to have a camera in the corner and a glass case. These are no longer baseball cards from the corner store. The thieves know better than anyone else that these are valuable items moving through a secondary market that isn’t closely watched. The shop owners in Calgary are beginning to act like they understand.
