Namtar Collector Case Study

Ryan’s Vintage Pokémon Collection

A 782-card vintage WOTC-era Pokémon collection organized into a searchable buyer dossier with source-backed market references, condition-risk flags, high-interest holdbacks, public catalog pages, and private buyer materials.

This is not a certified appraisal. Collectr is the structured card and market-reference source. Photos provide physical evidence. AI supports cataloging and review workflows. Human verification remains final authority.

Source of truth separation

Collectr = identity/market · Photos = evidence · AI = support · Human review = final decision

782cards
$14,739Collectr/NM reference
$9,832working adjusted scenario
209high-interest rows

Collection map

WOTC-era sets, buyer-ready structure

WoTC Promo

62 rows · 63 cards · 62 high-interest

Team Rocket

83 rows · 86 cards · 24 high-interest

Gym Challenge

132 rows · 134 cards · 22 high-interest

Gym Heroes

132 rows · 133 cards · 22 high-interest

Base Set 2

130 rows · 131 cards · 22 high-interest

Fossil

62 rows · 62 cards · 21 high-interest

Jungle

66 rows · 70 cards · 20 high-interest

Base Set (Unlimited)

101 rows · 103 cards · 16 high-interest

What Namtar did

1
Preserved source

Kept Collectr data, buyer PDFs, image assets, and audit outputs separated.

2
Separated authority

Collectr became card identity and market reference; AI became evidence support.

3
Built review surfaces

Public catalog, high-interest flags, buyer-room materials, and photo checklist workflows.

Serious buyer surface

Collectors, auction specialists, and private buyers can browse the redacted public catalog and request access to the private buyer room.

Request access