(If your answer has anything to do with the existence of the game, I am curious what you think of baseball cards.)
Yes, if you ignore the primary reason for Pokemon cards (the game), then they can magically be made to look like securities....
They then sell these things to people who are absolutely buying them with the expectation that they will go up in value.
No, completely false and this betrays a complete lack of understanding of why people buy collectibles. People buy collectibles to collect them; the value is in possessing the collectible; rare collectibles have value because it is harder to acquire them to add to one's collection.
With respect to baseball cards: they are collectibles. They have value because people collect them. To keep. They don't represent an interest in a common for-profit enterprise, and they don't derive their value from the efforts of others. The value of a card is derived from the card itself: the quality of the print, the rarity of the card in its respective printing run, and (most importantly) its physical condition. Popular players' cards are usually more valuable because more people want to own the card, not because owning the card will somehow make you more money from that player's efforts. (I still have a few baseball cards from when I was a kid. My Ken Griffey Jr card is worth about a penny because it is not in good condition; my mint Tim Belcher card is worth $1.35 because I never had a reason to look at it. But even though nobody knows who he is outside of hardcore Dodgers fans, some people out there still want to have a complete Dodgers lineup from the 1987.)
And this is why analogies to collectibles always fail for crypto bros: collectibles have value in themselves, but crypto only has value to the extent it might represent something else.
Yes, if you ignore the primary reason for Pokemon cards (the game), then they can magically be made to look like securities....
They then sell these things to people who are absolutely buying them with the expectation that they will go up in value.
No, completely false and this betrays a complete lack of understanding of why people buy collectibles. People buy collectibles to collect them; the value is in possessing the collectible; rare collectibles have value because it is harder to acquire them to add to one's collection.
With respect to baseball cards: they are collectibles. They have value because people collect them. To keep. They don't represent an interest in a common for-profit enterprise, and they don't derive their value from the efforts of others. The value of a card is derived from the card itself: the quality of the print, the rarity of the card in its respective printing run, and (most importantly) its physical condition. Popular players' cards are usually more valuable because more people want to own the card, not because owning the card will somehow make you more money from that player's efforts. (I still have a few baseball cards from when I was a kid. My Ken Griffey Jr card is worth about a penny because it is not in good condition; my mint Tim Belcher card is worth $1.35 because I never had a reason to look at it. But even though nobody knows who he is outside of hardcore Dodgers fans, some people out there still want to have a complete Dodgers lineup from the 1987.)
And this is why analogies to collectibles always fail for crypto bros: collectibles have value in themselves, but crypto only has value to the extent it might represent something else.