{
  "url": "https://blockindex.ai/coin/cards",
  "name": "Collector Crypt",
  "links": {
    "github": null,
    "website": null,
    "whitepaper": null
  },
  "dScore": 34,
  "market": {
    "priceUsd": 0.3109662234796091,
    "marketCapUsd": 128576332.32546824,
    "volume24hUsd": 11222436.26887395,
    "priceChange7dPct": 37.8571459,
    "priceChange24hPct": 15.46415683
  },
  "source": "BlockIndex.AI",
  "supply": {
    "max": 2000000000,
    "circulating": 413473627.092813,
    "circulatingPct": 20.67368135464065
  },
  "ticker": "CARDS",
  "founder": "Tuomas Holmberg",
  "vcFunded": true,
  "updatedAt": "2026-06-19T06:00:31.899839+00:00",
  "fairLaunch": false,
  "launchYear": 2025,
  "description": "Collector Crypt (CARDS) is a Solana-based crypto project focused on bringing physical collectible trading cards onto public blockchain rails. The project vaults authenticated physical cards, represents ownership through redeemable on-chain assets, and uses the CARDS token as the native utility token of its ecosystem. The supplied data identifies Collector Crypt as distinct from Cardstack, despite some source contamination between CARDS and CARD. The strongest supported identity is Collector Crypt: a trading-card and real-world-asset project using Solana infrastructure to make physical graded cards tradable, redeemable, and liquid in crypto-native markets. Tuomas Holmberg is identified as the founder, reportedly motivated by frustrations with shipping delays and grading backlogs in traditional physical card trading.\n\nThe project architecture centers on Solana-based settlement, redeemable NFTs, vaulted custody, and a marketplace model for tokenized collectibles. Physical cards are stored while ownership can transfer on-chain, allowing users to trade card exposure without repeatedly shipping the underlying items. Collector Crypt also uses a gacha-style product in which users buy randomized card packs, with reported instant buyback guarantees around 85% to 90% of fair value. This mechanism is presented as an important source of platform demand and transaction activity. CARDS itself is not an independent blockchain and does not have its own mining, validators, node network, or consensus mechanism; it is best classified as an SPL token on Solana.\n\nThe main use case is real-world collectible liquidity. Users can gain exposure to professionally graded trading cards, trade tokenized card assets, open randomized packs, and redeem assets tied to physical inventory. The project sits at the intersection of RWA tokenization, NFTs, gaming-style consumer crypto, and collectibles markets. Reported traction includes CoinMarketCap holder data around 14,290 holders, CoinEx-referenced trading volume above $150 million since launch, and CoinGecko-excerpted gacha spending of $89.5 million since inception. Some excerpts also mention later claims of $1 billion in volume and a ComicBook partnership, but the details were not fully available in the provided summary.\n\nCARDS has a fixed maximum supply of 2,000,000,000 tokens. Prior CoinMarketCap data reported about 399.31 million circulating CARDS, equal to roughly 19.97% of maximum supply. Allocation data describes Foundation 36.76%, Community 20%, Team 19.5%, Pre-seed and Seed Investors 11.87%, Advisors 4.37%, Genesis Launch Pool/Public Sale 5%, and On-chain Liquidity 2.5%. There is no explicit premine label, but the full supply appears to be allocated through tokenomics buckets rather than mined issuance. Public-sale proceeds are described as being directed toward purchasing card inventory rather than development, team compensation, or marketing, which ties token economics directly to the project’s physical-card liquidity model.\n\nGovernance details are limited. TokenInsight describes CARDS as supporting governance, but the supplied summaries do not provide a concrete voting mechanism, DAO process, proposal system, or treasury-governance implementation. The project has documented investor allocation, a foundation allocation, and token utility across transactions, liquidity, rewards, governance, and treasury-backed mechanics, but formal legal entity details, CEO information, open-source repositories, and licensing for Collector Crypt are not confirmed. The project’s forward direction appears focused on expanding tokenized collectible liquidity, marketplace participation, gacha mechanics, card-backed NFT trading, and third-party access to trading-card liquidity on and off chain.",
  "methodology": "https://blockindex.ai/dscore",
  "classification": {
    "layer": "Layer 2",
    "isToken": true,
    "consensus": "Other",
    "parentChain": "SOL"
  },
  "dScoreComponents": {
    "autonomy": 0,
    "ageHistory": 5,
    "governance": 11,
    "nodeDistribution": 0,
    "initialDistribution": 18
  },
  "decentralizationVerdict": "Centralized Leaning"
}