How Collectors Are Pricing Tyranitar Cards Across Different Grades

Tyranitar cards sell at dramatically different prices depending on their grade, with the differences often following a predictable but steep pattern.
Holo, reverse holo, and special foil cards

Tyranitar cards sell at dramatically different prices depending on their grade, with the differences often following a predictable but steep pattern.

Espeon card collectors determine prices primarily through a card's assigned grade—a numerical assessment of condition that directly correlates to resale...

Collectors pricing Umbreon cards across different grades face a dramatic reality: the difference between a PSA 9 and a PSA 10 is not just one grade...

Ho-Oh card prices vary dramatically based on condition grade, ranging from $15 to $600 or more depending on which specific card, which grade, and which...

Lugia cards command dramatically different prices depending on their grade, with the difference between a raw Near Mint copy and a certified PSA 10 often...

Collectors pricing Shining Magikarp cards across different grades use a combination of official third-party grading standards, specific edition variants,...

Shining Gyarados prices swing dramatically based on condition and grading—a 1st Edition raw card might fetch $750 in the secondary market while the same...

Dark Charizard pricing varies dramatically across different grades, with raw cards typically selling between $102 and $461, while the same cards in...

Red Cheeks Pikachu cards command vastly different prices depending on their grade, with values ranging from $130 for raw, ungraded copies to over $6,500...

Charmander cards are graded on a professional 1–10 scale, and the pricing differences between grades are dramatic.