
For the week of April 6, the tokenized Pokémon trading card market’s weekly revenue rose to $5.38 million, slightly below the September 2025 peak. The path toward the near-high this time is structurally different: the September 2025 peak was concentrated in a single week driven by the Collector Crypt TGE, while the current high comes from an organically built-up total over six consecutive weeks, with Courtyard serving as the primary contributor.

At the core of Courtyard’s design is this: users’ physical Pokémon cards are held in custody by a third-party institution, and the platform is backed by NFTs redeemable for physical cards. This design attracts a specific group of users—traditional collectors who want fragmented liquidity but are unwilling to take on crypto-native speculative risk. The tokenized layer plays the role of a “liquidity wrapper,” rather than a purely speculative tool.
More importantly, the tokens can be used directly for physical fulfillment, meaning the pricing function of the on-chain marketplace gains anchor validation from real assets—an essential capability that nearly all projects failed to achieve during the 2021 NFT boom.
The root cause of the failure of most NFTs in 2021 was that most NFTs lacked real-asset anchoring or clear utility cases, with value heavily dependent on market sentiment. The sustainability of the Courtyard model is built on three structural differences:
Each NFT corresponds to a real card that is securely held by an institution and can be redeemed at any time; demand comes from the existing collectibles market for Pokémon cards and does not rely on a “crypto narrative”; tokenization makes it possible to circulate high-value physical cards on-chain, reducing transaction friction costs for trading premium cards.
This structure formally moves tokenized collectibles out of the “NFT-related” category, upgrading them into an RWA subcategory with standalone viability.
Analysts note that if the Courtyard model is replicable, the next application areas with the most potential include sports cards (NBA, MLB), high-end luxury watches, limited-edition sneakers, and other categories—ones with established collectibles markets but constrained physical liquidity. The short-term risk is this: once the bullish cycle in the physical Pokémon card market ends, platform transaction volume could drop significantly.
After users hand their physical Pokémon cards over to a third-party institution for custody, they receive an NFT credential corresponding to those cards. These NFTs can be freely traded on-chain, and holders can request redemption of the corresponding physical cards at any time. This mechanism allows collectors to operate with liquidity without selling the physical cards, while also retaining ownership of the physical assets.
The trading volume of NFTs in 2021 was mainly driven by purely speculative demand, with no real-asset anchoring. Courtyard’s current peak is built on organic demand (sustained accumulation over 6 weeks rather than a one-week TGE burst), real-asset endorsement (each NFT corresponds to a real card), and service to the existing collectibles market (not relying on crypto-native users), making its sustainability significantly stronger.
The biggest short-term risk is the cyclical pullback of the physical Pokémon card market itself. Currently, Courtyard’s demand is highly dependent on the heat of the physical card market; once the Pokémon card collectibles hype fades, the tokenized market’s trading volume may also decline. Whether the platform can successfully expand into other categories such as sports cards and luxury watches is key to its long-term sustained growth.
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