The Multi-Platform Graded Card Problem
You have 20 graded cards on Courtyard. Another 15 on Beezie. Ten more on CollectorCrypt. Maybe a few on Phygitals.
To check your portfolio value today, you:
- Open Courtyard → log in → scroll through your collection
- Open Beezie → log in → repeat
- Open CollectorCrypt → repeat again
- Open Phygitals → one more time
- Pull up a spreadsheet and manually add everything up
If you’re like most collectors, you do this daily. Some do it multiple times per day.
Most collectors haven’t stopped to calculate what this fragmentation is actually costing them. It’s just become normal — four tabs, four logins, a spreadsheet nobody updates consistently.
This is the multi-platform graded card problem. It’s quiet, it’s pervasive, and it’s only getting worse as more platforms compete for your attention (and your cards).
The Problem: Four Separate Dashboards
Here’s what the reality looks like for anyone collecting tokenized graded cards in 2026:
Courtyard (Polygon): Your biggest holdings. Pokémon PSA 10s, some basketball cards, maybe a few baseball rookies. Portfolio value? You think around $15K, but you’d have to log in to know for sure.
Beezie (Base): You joined during the January claw machine launch. Played the claw 20 times, pulled a few decent cards. Some are still on the platform, others you listed on the marketplace. Total value? No idea without logging in.
CollectorCrypt (Solana): Your guilty pleasure. You love the gacha mechanics and have pulled dozens of cards over the past few months. The instant buyback feature is great, but tracking what you’ve kept vs. what you’ve cashed out? Spreadsheet chaos.
Phygitals (Solana): You dabble here for anime TCG stuff — One Piece cards, some virtual claw pulls. Physical redemptions pending and tokens in your wallet. Which ones are worth what? Another login required.
Your collection is scattered across three blockchains and four business models — and no single tool tells you the full picture. For a breakdown of how each platform operates, see our platform comparison.
Most collectors accept this as the cost of doing business. They shouldn’t.
- No unified portfolio view — your collection is fragmented across 4+ platforms
- Manual valuation work — you’re updating spreadsheets like it’s 2010
- Missed opportunities — same card might be cheaper on Beezie than Courtyard, but you’d never know without checking both
- Time waste — logging in to 4 platforms daily takes 15-20 minutes
And the kicker? Traditional portfolio trackers don’t solve this. Tools like Collectr work for raw cards and PSA registry data. But they don’t integrate with blockchain marketplaces. If you’re collecting on Courtyard, Beezie, CollectorCrypt, or Phygitals, you’re out of luck.
Why This Happens: Fragmentation is By Design
The multi-platform problem isn’t accidental. It’s a consequence of how the tokenized card market evolved.
Different Blockchains, Different Ecosystems
Each major platform chose a different blockchain:
- Courtyard: Polygon (Ethereum L2, institutional backing)
- Beezie: Base (Coinbase’s L2, launched January 2026)
- CollectorCrypt: Solana (fast transactions, crypto-native audience)
- Phygitals: Solana (anime TCG focus, virtual claw mechanics)
Your assets live in different places. Courtyard cards exist on Polygon. Beezie cards exist on Base. CollectorCrypt and Phygitals share Solana, but they’re separate platforms with separate APIs. To see your full collection, you need to connect to three different blockchains.
Different Business Models, Different Incentives
Each platform built a different revenue model — and that shapes what they show you:
- Courtyard: Hybrid (pack sales + marketplace). Optimizes for marketplace liquidity.
- CollectorCrypt: Gacha-first (instant reveal + buyback). Optimizes for daily engagement.
- Beezie: Claw machine + SWAP feature. Optimizes for arcade fun.
- Phygitals: Virtual claw + flexible redemption. Optimizes for redemption flexibility.
None of them optimize for cross-platform portfolio visibility — because that’s not their business. They want you on their platform, not thinking about what you own elsewhere.
No Native Incentive to Integrate
Why doesn’t Courtyard show you your Beezie cards? Because they’re competitors. Cross-platform integration would require connecting to competitor APIs, risking that users see better prices elsewhere, and coordinating on data standards.
It’s not happening. Collectors are on their own.
The Wallet Problem
“Can’t I just check my wallet?” Yes and no.
A blockchain explorer like Polygonscan shows your Courtyard cards as ERC-721 tokens. But there’s no price data, no card images, and no cross-chain view. You’d need separate explorers for Polygon, Solana, and Base. And if you acquired cards via gacha or claw mechanics, the blockchain shows the final token — not your entry cost or ROI.
Your wallet shows ownership. It doesn’t show value, context, or performance.
What Fragmentation Actually Costs You
The multi-platform problem isn’t just annoying — it’s quietly costing you money and time. Most collectors don’t realize the scale until they do the math.
Missed Arbitrage Opportunities
The same graded card can have wildly different prices across platforms. Real example from Caggy data:
- PSA 10 Blastoise Base Set — Courtyard: $2,100 / Phygitals: $1,780
- Spread: 15% for the identical card
If you’re only checking Courtyard, you’d never know Phygitals has it cheaper. If you’re listing on Phygitals, you’d never know Courtyard buyers are paying 15% more.
Arbitrage opportunities exist daily across 30,000+ active listings on four platforms. You can’t capitalize on them if you’re not tracking all four in real-time.
Time Waste: The Hidden Tax
The math is simple:
- 4 platforms × 4 minutes per login = 16 minutes per day
- 16 minutes × 365 days = 97 hours per year
That’s four full days spent logging in and manually checking prices. For serious collectors checking multiple times per day, double or triple that. What else could you do with 97 hours?
Portfolio Blind Spots
Without a unified view, you forget what you own.
“Wait, did I already buy that card on Beezie? Or was that Courtyard?” / “I know I have a PSA 9 Charizard somewhere… which platform?” / “How much did I spend on CollectorCrypt gacha last month?”
You either over-index on one platform (usually Courtyard because it’s biggest) or under-utilize smaller platforms because checking them feels like extra work. Cards sit on low-liquidity platforms instead of being listed where buyers actually are.
No Independent Price Verification
Each platform has an incentive to show healthy prices — it drives pack sales and marketplace activity. If Courtyard says your PSA 10 Pikachu is worth $500, how do you verify without checking Beezie, CollectorCrypt, and eBay?
An independent aggregator that pulls from all four platforms gives you a cleaner signal. If the same card is $500 on Courtyard but $400 everywhere else, that’s worth investigating before you buy.
Tax and Insurance Headaches
At tax time, you need to report acquisition cost (marketplace purchase, gacha pack cost, claw entry fee), sale proceeds (marketplace sale, buyback, cashout), and platform fees paid (Courtyard 0-6%, Beezie 6%, CollectorCrypt ~4%, Phygitals 2%). Doing this across four platforms with three blockchains? Nightmare.
For insurance, you need one export with complete transaction history across all platforms. That doesn’t exist natively — and explaining to your insurance agent that your $50K collection is split across Polygon, Solana, and Base blockchain is its own challenge.
The Solution: Cross-Platform Aggregation
Here’s what the ideal solution looks like — and why it’s only now becoming possible.
What You Actually Need
One dashboard that shows:
- Total portfolio value across all four platforms
- Real-time price tracking — floor prices, FMV estimates, recent sales
- Cross-platform price comparison — same card, different platforms, instant arbitrage visibility
- Unified transaction history — every purchase, gacha reveal, claw pull, sale, cashout
- Blockchain-agnostic — works with Polygon, Solana, and Base without manual switching
- Automatic sync — connect wallets once, never manually update again
No spreadsheets. No four-tab juggling. No cognitive overhead.
How It Works
The technical challenge is multi-blockchain data integration:
- Wallet Connection — connect Polygon wallet (Courtyard), Solana wallet (CollectorCrypt + Phygitals), and Base wallet (Beezie). Read-only connections — private keys never shared.
- On-Chain Data Pull — query each blockchain for NFT ownership, match token IDs to platform card databases, enrich with metadata (card name, grader, grade, cert number).
- Price Aggregation — pull current listings from each marketplace, calculate floor prices and FMV, identify the same card across platforms by cert number + grader + grade.
- Unified Dashboard — all cards in one interface, sortable by platform, category, value. Price history, arbitrage opportunities, portfolio performance.
- Automatic Sync — re-query blockchains every 30 minutes, detect new acquisitions, generate alerts when prices move.
Why This Didn’t Exist Until Now
The market was too small. In 2022-2023, Courtyard was the only game in town. No other platforms meant no multi-platform problem.
Beezie changed everything. January 2026: Beezie moved from Flow to Base and launched claw mechanics. $28M in volume in five weeks proved collectors want alternatives. Multi-platform went from “nice to have” to “must have.”
Blockchain infrastructure matured. Connecting to Polygon, Solana, and Base simultaneously is now trivial. RPC endpoints are reliable, APIs are documented, wallet standards (WalletConnect, Solana Wallet Adapter) work across chains.
The timing window is now. Most collectors are still mono-platform. The multi-platform problem is real but not yet universally felt. That changes as the market matures. The collectors who adopt cross-platform tracking now will have a real edge.
How to Manage Your Multi-Platform Portfolio Today
Option 1: Manual Tracker (Spreadsheet)
Set up columns for: Platform, Blockchain, Card Name, Grader, Grade, Cert Number, Acquisition Method (Marketplace/Gacha/Claw), Acquisition Cost, Current Floor Price, FMV Estimate, % Gain/Loss.
Update weekly by logging into each platform and checking current prices.
Works for: Small portfolios (under 20 cards). Falls short when: You have 50+ cards across multiple platforms and prices move daily. For more on tracking approaches, see our portfolio tracking guide.
Option 2: Platform-Native Tools
If 80%+ of your collection is on one platform, use that platform’s native dashboard as your primary view. Set weekly reminders to check the others.
Works for: Platform-concentrated collectors. Falls short when: You actively trade across multiple platforms and need real-time price comparison.
Option 3: Cross-Platform Aggregator
Connect your wallets once, let the tool sync automatically. Caggy aggregates Courtyard, Beezie, CollectorCrypt, and Phygitals into one dashboard — 336,000+ graded cards across 27 categories, with 30-minute sync and cross-platform price comparison.
Track all your cards in one dashboard →
Platform-by-Platform Tips
Courtyard: Use the “Portfolio” tab for FMV estimates. Check “Redemption Queue” for pending physical shipments. Note pack costs separately for cost-basis tracking.
Beezie: Track claw pulls manually (Beezie doesn’t export transaction history yet). Use the SWAP feature for instant exits at 90% FMV. Compare marketplace prices to Courtyard before listing.
CollectorCrypt: Use instant buyback to lock in profits (85-90% value). Screenshot gacha reveals for ROI tracking. Export transaction history for tax records.
Phygitals: Decide redemption strategy upfront — ship physical, trade token, or cash out at ~85%. Note expected odds per pack type. Monitor emerging categories (One Piece, Yu-Gi-Oh!) for early liquidity.
The Future of Multi-Platform Collecting
The tokenized card market is maturing fast. In 2024, Courtyard was the only option. In 2025, CollectorCrypt emerged. In January 2026, Beezie’s Base migration proved blockchain choice matters. Phygitals crossed $136M in volume. The Q1 2026 RWA market report shows four platforms now processing over $1.4 billion in combined all-time volume.
Expect more platforms. Expect more blockchains. Expect more fragmentation.
But also expect aggregation to become standard. Just like DeFi users rely on Zapper or DeBank to see their portfolio across 10+ protocols, graded card collectors will rely on aggregators to see their portfolio across 4+ platforms.
The multi-platform problem is solvable. The technology exists. The market structure demands it.
Track all your cards across all platforms on Caggy →
FAQ
Why can’t I just use one platform for everything? You can — but you’ll miss inventory, pricing, and opportunities on the other three. Different platforms have different strengths: Courtyard has the deepest liquidity, CollectorCrypt has the best gacha, Beezie has the fastest exit (SWAP), and Phygitals has the lowest fees (2%) and broadest card acceptance.
Do I need separate wallets for each platform? You need one EVM wallet (MetaMask covers both Courtyard on Polygon and Beezie on Base) and one Solana wallet (Phantom covers both CollectorCrypt and Phygitals). Two wallets, four platforms.
How much time does cross-platform tracking actually save? At 16 minutes per day across four platforms, that’s roughly 97 hours per year — four full days of manual checking. An automated aggregator reduces this to zero active tracking time.
Can the same card really have different prices on different platforms? Yes. We regularly see 10-20% price spreads on identical cards (same grader, same grade, same cert number) across platforms. Different buyer pools, different fee structures, and different liquidity levels create persistent pricing gaps.
Is it safe to connect my wallet to an aggregator? Read-only wallet connections only share your public address — the same information visible on any blockchain explorer. Your private keys never leave your wallet. No aggregator needs or should request signing permissions for portfolio viewing.
What about tax reporting across platforms? Tokenized cards are taxed as collectibles. Each platform has different transaction formats, fee structures, and acquisition methods. A unified tracker that consolidates transaction history across all four platforms simplifies Schedule D reporting significantly.
Published: March 6, 2026 Platform data: Caggy aggregated marketplace (336,000+ total certs, 30,000+ active listings across Courtyard, Beezie, Phygitals, CollectorCrypt) Data sources: Dune Analytics — Solana TCG, Dune Analytics — Beezie on Base. Caggy aggregated marketplace data. This is not financial advice.