Logan Paul has always been vocal about the Pokemon card market, and recently he broke down why slow circulation is a game-changer for Charizard cards. In a video chat with collectors, he pointed out that Charizard, especially the classic Base Set ones, holds its value best when not everyone is flooding the market with copies. Fewer cards in circulation means less supply chasing buyers, which drives prices up over time.
He compared it to rare sneakers or art pieces. If too many Charizards hit the market fast, like from big print runs or bulk sellers dumping stock, the price drops because collectors can grab them cheap. But when owners hold tight, treating them like investments, scarcity kicks in. Paul said he has seen Charizard ex and holo versions climb from a few hundred bucks to thousands just because big players like him and others sit on their stacks instead of flipping them quick.
Paul stressed patience pays off. He avoids selling his top Charizards during hype waves, letting demand build naturally from new fans and nostalgia chasers. This slow drip keeps the card elite. For example, he mentioned how the 1st Edition Shadowless Charizard benefits most, with auction prices spiking when supply stays low. Collectors on PokemonPricing.com track this daily, watching raw and graded copies hold steady or rise.
He also touched on fakes hurting the market, but slow circulation from trusted holders weeds them out. Real Charizards from sealed packs or verified sellers shine brighter when not oversupplied. Paul urged new collectors to buy quality and hold, saying it turns a hobby into real gains. His take lines up with market trends where low-population slabs from PSA 10s fetch premiums. Keep an eye on Charizard listings here, as this strategy keeps prices strong for patient holders.


