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33 Things In Your Attic that Could be Worth Real Money

33 Things In Your Attic that Could be Worth Real Money On 3/11/21 at 6:20 AM EST Junk or valuable collectible? Some of your cast-offs could be worth hundreds, or even thousands. Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago/Getty Odds are there s a treasure trove waiting to be unearthed inside your home. Hidden among the hand-me-downs, knick-knacks, old toys and discarded electronics gathering dust in your attic, garage, basement or closet are valuable items that might be worth hundreds, often even thousands, of dollars if you can figure out how to identify them. With a collector out there for almost any type of item, from your mom s old casserole dish to that Nintendo you haven t touched in 30 years, the trick lies in distinguishing what s truly worth the effort and time to resell and what s better off in the donation pile.

Pokemon cards are fetching 6-figure sums at auction

Advertisement Gotta catch em all: Pandemic sends prices soaring for Pokemon cards Boxes of the 1999 US first edition base set had sold for around US$400,000 (S$528,000) at auction in recent months. A Pokemon trading cards first edition base set is seen in an undated photo. Courtesy of Heritage Auctions/Handout via Reuters 23 Feb 2021 10:11PM (Updated: 24 Feb 2021 07:37AM) Share this content Bookmark Pokemon is all grown up, and so are its prices. Two decades after the Japanese trading card game became the biggest thing in schoolyards around the world, Pokemon cards are fetching six figures at auction in a boom that appears to have been fuelled by coronavirus pandemic lockdowns.

Pokémon card prices skyrocket during the pandemic, study shows

Pokémon card prices skyrocket during the pandemic, study shows One card s value increased by 1775 per cent First Edition Pokémon Trading Card Game. Credit: Heritage Auctions Pokémon cards have dramatically increased in value during the global COVID-19 pandemic, according to a report by “When COVID-19 hit, a lot of Gen X and Millennials were looking for things to do and we found a lot of these guys and girls started playing Pokémon again because they grew up with it,” Joe Maddalena, the executive vice president of Texas-based Heritage Auctions said of the increase in demand. In recent months, a 1999 U.S. first edition set sold for $400,000 (£283,158), while a single mint condition Charizard card sold for $300,000 (£212,370). Maddelena added that the same Charizard card would have fetched around $16,000 (£11,329) in late 2019.

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