Struggling to catalog your Korean Pokémon cards because no app can identify them? Use the Collectr app as a workaround by logging them as Japanese cards, or build your own spreadsheet for total control over your collection.
So you have a pile of Korean Pokémon cards. The art is great, you got them for a good price, and now they’re a complete mess on your desk because none of the apps you use can identify them.
You try scanning one with the TCGPlayer app. It pulls up the wrong card, or just errors out. Pokellector has no Korean support. And you’re left wondering if you really have to build a spreadsheet just to track what you own.
This is the main headache for anyone collecting cards outside of English and Japanese. The big, polished apps with scanners and price guides just weren't made for the Korean market.
But you have options. They just aren't as simple as scanning a card.
The best workaround right now is the Collectr app. You have to log your Korean cards as their Japanese equivalents. It works because most Korean sets are just direct ports of the Japanese releases, so the card numbers match up. The price will be wrong, but you’ll at least have a visual gallery of your collection, which is a huge step.
The process is simple: make a new portfolio called "Korean," and when you add a card, just search for the Japanese version and add it there.
Some people even mark the condition as "Damaged" or "Heavily Played" to tank the listed price, getting it a little closer to the Korean card's actual value (usually around 40-70% of the Japanese version). It’s a hack, for sure. But it's the best you can do inside an app.
Or you can just forget the apps and build your own system. It's not as hard as it sounds. A simple Google Sheet or Notion page gives you total control over how you track your collection.
This is what most serious collectors of non-English/Japanese cards end up doing. I remember one night around 4 AM, trying to log a few boxes of the Korean VMAX Climax set. My 2011 Honda Civic was parked outside with dew on the windshield, and I was getting absolutely nowhere trying to force an app to recognize these cards. I finally gave up, opened a blank Google Sheet, and just built a tracker myself. It took less than an hour, and it worked better than any app I'd tried.
All you really need are a few columns:
No app has accurate prices for Korean cards. The data just isn't there. If you want to know what your cards are actually worth, you have to search for them on eBay and filter by "Sold Items."
That’s the real market price. There is no other.
Get in the habit of checking sold listings. Check before you buy, and check when you're logging your new cards. It's the only way to know if you're paying a fair price or if you've pulled something valuable.
This isn't a one-time job. If you let a huge stack of new cards build up, you'll never feel like cataloging them. The best way to handle it is to just spend 20 or 30 minutes each weekend logging the new stuff. It’s a small bit of maintenance that prevents a huge headache later. You end up with an organized collection you actually know the contents of, instead of a pile of cards you feel guilty about.
Tired of your paycheck evaporating? Expense tracking apps automatically categorize your spending to give you a clear, non-judgmental picture of your financial habits, so you can see where your money *really* goes.
Most metal price trackers are useless distractions. A great app gives you a real edge with non-negotiable features like real-time data and customizable alerts that tell you exactly when to act.
Your phone is designed to keep you hooked, and willpower isn't enough to fight back. Use a tracking app to get the data you need to see your habits and break the cycle of mindless scrolling.
Stop logging empty hours and start tracking your focus. A study app uses tools like focus sessions and motivational streaks to reveal where your time actually goes, helping you build a system that works.
Download Trider to access AI tools and publish your routines.
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