30 years after Pokémon's release, fans are still trying to catch 'em all
[February 27, 2026]
By JAIMIE DING and LIAM MCEWAN
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Benson Lu's life revolves around Pokémon.
The 26-year-old has played the mobile game Pokémon Go every day for a
decade, watches the animated show every week, goes to the local card
shop in his Los Angeles suburb to play the brand's trading card game
every week, and has a whopping collection of cards worth more than
$70,000.
“I don’t remember when was the last day I did not think about Pokémon at
all,” he said.
In the 30 years since Pokémon debuted in Japan with the 1996 release of
Pokémon Red and Pokémon Green for Nintendo Game Boy, the franchise has
taken over the globe with its animated shows, mobile games and highly
coveted trading cards. Its popularity continues with fans young and old.
Pokémon offers a masterclass in character design, which has helped make
it so enduring, said Heather Cole, teaching assistant professor of game
design and interactive media at West Virginia University.
“I think the longevity of it has to do with the characters and
world-building it does with the characters,” she said.
A valuable commodity
It's not just cuteness that has people clamoring for merchandise,
particularly trading cards. Today, some are so coveted that social media
star Logan Paul sold one for a record $16.5 million. In Southern
California, the fervor around Pokémon cards has led to strings of
break-ins in recent months at trading card stores that have amounted to
hundreds of thousands of dollars of losses and even some collectors
robbed at gunpoint.
Adam Corn, owner of card business Overdose Gaming Inc, said he was able
to buy a house last year from his Pokémon cards.

“Pokémon almost always appreciates in value over time,” Corn said. “So
it’s just a really good place to put your money in my opinion, better
than a a lot of other assets.”
Companies like Beckett Grading Services and Professional Sports
Authenticator authenticate and grade the quality of Pokémon cards on a
scale of 1-10, with 10 being pristine mint condition and fetching the
highest prices. Paul bought the PSA Grade 10 Pikachu Illustrator card a
few months prior for $5.3 million and wore the card on a chain around
his neck in videos. It features a Pikachu holding a pen and feather
sweeper.
Last Tuesday, thieves stole more than $80,000 of Pokémon cards from
Do-We Collectibles in Anaheim — the second time the store has been
targeted. Other stores around Los Angeles and in New York have been hit
by Pokémon thieves too.
[to top of second column]
|

Tyler, right, and his friend George, hold up their favorite Pokemon
trading cards, in Scituate, Mass., Sept. 9, 1999. (AP Photo/Charles
Krupa, File)
 Duy Pham, owner of the Anaheim
store, said the financial incentive of trading cards for robbers and
scalpers means “the hobby will never be the same.”
“It’s rougher for collectors and players,” Pham said. “It’s hard for
us to get anything."
Collectors can either pay retail price for a standard pack of
randomized Pokémon cards, around $5 for 10 cards, or buy the
specific card they want secondhand for higher prices. But much like
gambling, opening packs doesn’t always pan out to profit — Aiden
Zeng spent $1,000 on packs of cards that were only valued at $60 on
the resale market, he said.
Zeng, 17, said his fandom began in elementary school, when he
obsessed over character guidebooks. He eventually began trying to
collect every single type of card available for his favorite, Black
Kyurem.
“I memorized every single Pokémon’s specific move set, what region
they come from, some of the lore behind it,” Zeng said.
Resurgence of popularity
Even beyond dedicated collectors, Zeng said he has seen a resurgence
of popularity for Pokémon at his high school in Toronto, where some
students decorate their phone cases with cards featuring special
artwork or a holographic sheen.
Pokémon creator Satoshi Tajiri has said he enjoyed catching insects
and other small critters in the fields and forests outside the Tokyo
suburb where he lived as a child. Those creatures inspired him to
make the colorful, fantastical Pokémon of which there are thousands
of species today.
While his hobby is lucrative, Lu said the draw for him is still
nostalgia for the characters he grew up with and the community he
has formed around Pokémon. He prefers not to sell his single cards
because he worries he will never be able to find them again.
Lu recently spent an entire Saturday walking around the Rose Bowl in
Pasadena, California, looking for Pokémon on his augmented reality
phone game at an event attended by thousands.
“I’ve liked Pokémon ever since I was a kid," he said. “And I still
like it the same amount.”
All contents © copyright 2026 Associated Press. All rights reserved |