How the reads are made
The daily price is the easy part. Every tracker has it. What sets one booster box apart from another is the read on top of the price: where it sits in its print cycle, whether supply is tightening, what scarcity is doing to the number. This page is the index to how those reads are made.
Each one is built from data that already moves every day, read the same way everywhere it appears, so the chip on a product page can't disagree with the basket on the index page or the board on the supply outlook.
Open vs Hold
What a booster box is worth cracked open today versus held sealed. Both are averages across many boxes, with the realistic spread shown alongside, so you can see which way the math leans before you decide to rip or to keep it shrink-wrapped.
Reprint risk
How much more printing a product still faces. Low risk means little new supply is coming to cap the price, a tailwind for anyone holding sealed. It reads the print cycle against how the market is pricing the product right now.
The Signal
The one-line outlook every product carries: Scarcity tailwind, Balanced, Supply headwind, or Too early to call. It pulls together reprint risk, the market's recent price action, and the open-vs-hold read into a single verdict, with every factor that fed it listed underneath. It stays quiet on products with too little history to stand behind.
Supply outlook
A two-sided board of which boxes are getting scarcer against which are heavily supplied, plus a running feed of the products whose supply picture recently shifted. The same reprint-risk read that drives the per-product chip sorts the board.
The indices
One basket for all of sealed, then split by how close each print run is to closing: a Scarcity index for products whose printing has wound down, an In-Print index for those still filling shelves. Era cuts (Vintage, Modern, and per-era slices) sit alongside, benchmarked against the S&P 500.
The honest part
These are directional reads on observed data, not predictions and not financial advice. They tell you how a product is structured and how its price has behaved, not what it will do next. Treat them as a starting point for your own judgment.