Track Graded Cards Across RWA Marketplaces — A Practical Guide
You own graded cards on Courtyard. Some on CollectorCrypt. Maybe a few claw pulls on Beezie. To check your total portfolio value, you open four tabs, log into three different blockchains, and add up numbers in your head.
This guide covers how to track graded cards across all RWA marketplaces — including three tracking methods (from free to automated), platform-specific tips, and best practices for valuation, tax, and rebalancing.
What Is a Graded Card Portfolio Tracker?
A graded card portfolio tracker monitors the value and performance of your graded trading cards. At minimum, it tracks:
- Current prices across marketplace listings
- Fair Market Value (FMV) estimates
- Certification details — grader, grade, cert number
- Platform distribution — which cards are where
Traditional tools like Collectr focus on raw (ungraded) cards sold on eBay. But tokenized graded cards on RWA platforms present a different challenge: your collection lives on multiple blockchains with fundamentally different business models.
The Four RWA Platforms (Quick Overview)
Before diving into tracking methods, here’s what you’re dealing with:
| Platform | Blockchain | Model | Strength |
|---|---|---|---|
| Courtyard | Polygon | Packs + Marketplace | Largest inventory, native FMV estimates |
| CollectorCrypt | Solana | Gacha (rip & reveal) | High engagement, instant buyback option |
| Beezie | Base | Claw mechanics + Marketplace | Lowest fees, explosive growth since Jan 2026 |
| Phygitals | Solana | Virtual claw + Packs | Flexible redemption (ship, trade, or cash out) |
Each platform has its own pricing, liquidity pool, and user base. The same PSA 10 Charizard can have wildly different prices across platforms — which is exactly why cross-platform tracking matters. For a deeper look at the revenue numbers and market dynamics, see our RWA Trading Card Market Report Q1 2026.
Why Track Across Multiple Platforms?
Price Discrepancies Create Opportunities
Different buyer pools and business models lead to real price spreads. A card listed at $450 on Courtyard’s marketplace might be indexed at $380 on CollectorCrypt’s buyback system. Without cross-platform visibility, you’d never know.
Caggy’s data shows spreads as high as 119% between listing price and best offer across platforms. These aren’t theoretical — they’re live marketplace data.
Platform Diversification Matters
Smart collectors spread their holdings across platforms for the same reason investors diversify across brokerages:
- Liquidity varies. Pokémon cards move fast on Courtyard. One Piece sells better on CollectorCrypt.
- Fee structures differ. Beezie charges a flat 6%. Courtyard charges 5-10%. CollectorCrypt’s gacha spread is variable. (Full breakdown in our platform comparison.)
- Business models affect returns. Gacha-acquired cards on CollectorCrypt may appreciate differently than marketplace purchases on Courtyard.
Tax and Insurance Need Accurate Numbers
Tokenized cards are taxed like collectibles (28% max rate for long-term gains). Blockchain transactions are transparent — the IRS can see on-chain activity on Polygon, Solana, and Base. A unified tracker gives you clean export data for Schedule D reporting.
For high-value cards, you also need accurate FMV for insurance riders and estate planning.
Three Ways to Track Your Portfolio
Method 1: Platform Native Tools (Free, Limited)
Each platform has its own portfolio view:
- Courtyard shows your tokenized cards on Polygon with native FMV estimates. Check the “Redemption Queue” tab for cards pending shipment — they won’t show current prices.
- CollectorCrypt tracks your gacha reveals on Solana with an instant buyback price (85-90% of indexed value).
- Beezie operates on both Flow and Base. Since expanding to Base in January 2026, new features like claw mechanics run on Base while Flow retains the larger legacy inventory.
- Phygitals shows your holdings on Solana with redemption options (physical ship, trade, or ~85% cash out).
Works well for: Collectors with cards on a single platform.
Falls short when: You hold cards across multiple platforms. You’ll need four open tabs, three wallet connections, and manual math to see your total value.
Method 2: Spreadsheet (Free, Manual)
Some collectors build Google Sheets with columns for platform, card name, cert number, grader, grade, purchase price, and current floor price.
Works well for: Small portfolios (under 20 cards) where you enjoy manual tracking.
Falls short when: You need to update prices across 30,000+ active listings. Prices move daily. Manual lookups become a part-time job, and stale data leads to bad decisions.
Tip: If you go this route, track acquisition method (marketplace purchase vs. gacha reveal vs. claw pull) separately. Your cost basis calculation depends on it.
Method 3: Cross-Platform Aggregator (Automated)
Connect your wallets once and let the tool sync across all platforms automatically.
How it works:
- Connect your wallets (Polygon for Courtyard, Solana for CollectorCrypt/Phygitals, Base for Beezie)
- The aggregator discovers your cards across all platforms
- A unified dashboard shows total value, platform breakdown, category distribution, and price trends
What you get:
- Total portfolio value across all platforms
- Platform-by-platform breakdown
- Price history (7-day, 30-day, 90-day)
- Cross-platform price comparison for the same card
- Category distribution (Pokémon, basketball, baseball, etc.)
Works well for: Anyone with 20+ cards across multiple platforms.
Trade-off: Requires a read-only wallet connection. Your private keys never leave your wallet — the aggregator only reads public address data.
Try it: browse the Caggy marketplace →
Platform-Specific Tracking Tips
Courtyard (Polygon)
Courtyard has the largest inventory and the most mature pricing data. Their native FMV estimates are based on recent sales across 230,000+ certs, making them a reliable baseline.
Watch out for: Redemption queue cards. Once you request a physical card, it enters a shipping pipeline. The token may still appear in your portfolio, but pricing data becomes unreliable until the process completes.
Tracking focus: FMV vs. floor price. Courtyard’s marketplace model means listed prices reflect what sellers want, not necessarily what buyers pay. FMV (based on actual sales) is more useful for valuation.
Browse Courtyard cards on Caggy →
CollectorCrypt (Solana)
CollectorCrypt’s gacha model means your “acquisition cost” is the pack price, not a marketplace listing. This matters for portfolio performance tracking and tax reporting.
Watch out for: Buyback price fluctuation. CollectorCrypt offers instant buyback at 85-90% of indexed value — but that index updates based on market conditions. Don’t confuse buyback price with FMV.
Tracking focus: Cost basis per gacha reveal. If you spent $100 on a pack and pulled a card now worth $250, your gain is $150 (minus fees). Track pack costs, not just current values.
Beezie (Base)
Beezie expanded to Base on January 16, 2026 and launched claw mechanics alongside their existing Flow marketplace. It now operates on both chains — Flow holds the larger inventory while Base powers the new features. Data is still building up.
Watch out for: Volatility. With only a few months of post-migration data, prices can swing. Arbitrage opportunities are real but so are the risks.
Tracking focus: Claw pull ROI. Track your claw costs separately from marketplace purchases. Different acquisition methods should be evaluated independently.
Phygitals (Solana)
Phygitals offers the most flexible redemption options: keep the token, request physical delivery, or cash out at ~85% of market value.
Watch out for: The virtual claw odds structure (roughly 80% commons, 15% uncommons, 4% epics, 1% mythics at a $75 entry point). Factor expected value into your tracking, not just the price of what you pulled.
Tracking focus: Redemption status. Cards you’ve cashed out or redeemed physically should be marked differently from active holdings.
Best Practices for Portfolio Management
Use Median, Not Average
Outlier listings distort averages. Some marketplaces have test listings over $1 billion. The median floor price across all RWA platforms is around $50 — a much more reliable number than any average.
Track Acquisition Method Separately
Your cost basis depends on how you got the card:
- Marketplace purchase: Cost = purchase price + fees + gas
- Gacha reveal (CollectorCrypt): Cost = pack price (divided by cards per pack)
- Claw pull (Beezie): Cost = claw play price
- Virtual claw (Phygitals): Cost = entry price ($75 for Zardo packs)
Mixing these together makes performance tracking meaningless.
Rebalance When Spreads Are Large
If the same card is listed at significantly different prices across platforms, that’s a signal. You can:
- Sell on the platform with the higher price
- Redeem physically and re-tokenize on another platform (if fees justify it)
- Wait for prices to converge
Cross-platform tracking makes these spreads visible. Without it, you’re flying blind. (See how platform business models affect pricing for more context.)
Update Regularly
Prices move. New listings appear daily. If you’re tracking manually, weekly updates are the minimum. Automated tools sync every 30 minutes, catching movements you’d otherwise miss.
FAQ
How do I connect my wallet to a portfolio tracker? Portfolio trackers use read-only wallet connections (public addresses only). You’ll connect your Polygon wallet for Courtyard, Solana for CollectorCrypt and Phygitals, and Base for Beezie. Your private keys stay in your wallet.
Which platform has the most accurate price data? Courtyard provides native FMV estimates based on actual sales. For cross-platform comparison, aggregators pull real-time listing data from all four platforms.
Do I need to track gacha/claw pulls differently? Yes. Your cost basis for a gacha reveal or claw pull is the pack/play price — not the revealed card’s initial listing value. This matters for both performance tracking and tax reporting.
How often should I check my portfolio? Weekly if tracking manually. Automated tools sync every 30 minutes, which is especially useful in a market where thousands of new listings appear daily.
Are tokenized cards taxed differently? Tokenized cards are taxed as collectibles (28% max long-term capital gains rate, vs. 20% for stocks). Track cost basis carefully — blockchain transactions are transparent and auditable.
Last updated: February 23, 2026 Data source: Caggy aggregated marketplace data across Courtyard, Beezie, Phygitals & CollectorCrypt This is not financial or tax advice. Consult a qualified professional for your specific situation.