A Texan claims to have made a fortune with Yu-Gi-Oh cards found in the trash.

A Texan claims to have made a fortune with Yu-Gi-Oh cards found in the trash.
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The unusual story of a man who sold hundreds of uncut sheets from the popular card game raised suspicions of theft in the collector community.

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A man from Texas went viral in the collecting world after claiming he found a real treasure in a trash container: hundreds of thousands of Yu-Gi-Oh cards, including factory uncut sheets that could be worth nearly a million dollars.

The story, which seemed straight out of a dream for any fan, quickly turned into a drama filled with accusations and doubts.

It all began in late March when numerous uncut sheets of cards from the game based on the Japanese manga appeared for sale on platforms like eBay, Facebook, and TikTok. This type of product is extremely rare in the market because Konami, the company responsible for Yu-Gi-Oh, usually destroys defective or surplus sheets and is very strict with its control.

The seller offered more than 500,000 cards in bulk and at least 400 uncut sheets, a volume that raised all alarms in the community.

A man is making a fortune selling Yu-Gi-Oh cards he found in the trash. Or at least that's what he saysThe suspicions that sparked the scandal

What caught the most attention was not just the quantity, but the way he was selling them. Instead of doing it discreetly and at high prices, the man posted ads with blurry photos where the valuable sheets appeared piled up as if they were trash. Additionally, he offered them at prices far below their real value, which raised immediate doubts.

In Facebook groups dedicated to collectors of uncut sheets, most agreed that the cards must have been stolen. The seller responded erratically, deleted posts, and maintained his version: he had taken them out of the trash. Nobody believed him.

"Well, let me ask everyone: if you found the same thing in the trash, would you try to sell it or not?" his mother wrote in one of the groups to defend him. The intervention had the opposite effect than intended and ended up revealing that the son had a history of theft.

Despite the accusations, some clues suggest that the story of the container could be true.

Truth or lie? The evidence in favor of the seller

The man's mother owns a company in Dallas, a city where there is a Cartamundi factory, the company that prints collectible cards. Additionally, several of the sheets he was selling were in poor condition, something that would fit with having been rescued from the trash.

On Reddit, the consensus among many users is that they really came out of a dumpster and that the seller, inexperienced in the field, was overwhelmed by the situation and did not know how to handle the sales in the best way.

The protagonist himself claimed on Facebook to have made more than $60,000 with "these damn Yu-Gi-Oh cards pulled from the trash." On May 4, he reposted that he was "back in business," indicating that he remains active in the market.

The controversy highlights how passionate the world of collectible cards is and how a fortuitous find can generate as much enthusiasm as distrust. While some see him as lucky, others demand clearer answers about the origin of the cards.

For now, the story remains open and continues to generate debate in forums and social networks dedicated to collecting. Yu-Gi-Oh continues to demonstrate that it can generate stories as epic as those experienced in its duels.


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