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How Pokémon cards are fuelling crime in Melbourne
Key takeaways
- Alex Balykov is a trading card shop owner in Hughesdale, who started his business a few months ago.
- Trading card-related crimes in Victoria rose from just nine burglary, break-and-enter or theft cases at retail stores in 2021 to almost one a week in 2025, reflecting the skyrocketing value of Pokémon cards.
- Rare Pokémon cards can sell for hundreds or even thousands of dollars, with a record sale of one Pikachu card going for over $22 million earlier this year.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
Alex Balykov is a trading card shop owner in Hughesdale, who started his business a few months ago. (ABC News: Erielle Sudario)
Trading card-related crimes in Victoria rose from just nine burglary, break-and-enter or theft cases at retail stores in 2021 to almost one a week in 2025, reflecting the skyrocketing value of Pokémon cards.
Rare Pokémon cards can sell for hundreds or even thousands of dollars, with a record sale of one Pikachu card going for over $22 million earlier this year.
Article preview — originally published by ABC Australia. Full story at the source.
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