
High-Value Pokémon Cards Stolen in Brazen New York Store Robbery
According to WMUR, police in New York City are on the hunt for a group of suspects after a Pokémon store in Manhattan was hit in a brazen, blink-and-you-miss-it robbery that sounds like something straight out of a very cursed episode of Pokémon.

The whole thing went down Wednesday night while the shop was hosting a community event. More than 40 people were inside, presumably there to trade cards, battle, and live their best nostalgic lives — not to suddenly find themselves staring down a real-world villain arc. Authorities say multiple masked individuals rushed into the store, threatened everyone inside, and went straight for the merchandise.
According to employees, the entire ordeal was over in about three minutes. Three minutes. That’s barely enough time for me to decide what to order at Dunkin’, yet somehow it was enough time for the suspects to make off with roughly $100,000 worth of Pokémon items. Officers say the group was armed and reportedly used hammers to smash display cases, which feels aggressively unnecessary but apparently effective.
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Witness descriptions say the suspects were wearing masks and anime-themed backpacks, which is a sentence I never expected to type in a crime story, yet here we are. The store itself only opened a few months ago, back in November, and now the owner is already considering hiring armed security just to keep the Charizards safe.
What makes this even wilder is that this wasn’t an isolated incident. Similar high-end Pokémon store robberies have popped up recently in cities like Boston, Seattle, and Los Angeles, which means there is either a very organized crime ring targeting trading cards… or the collective value of Pokémon memorabilia has officially reached “criminal enterprise” levels.
And honestly, that might be the most depressing part of all this. The fact that cartoon playing cards are now worth more than about 95% of everything I own combined really makes you stop and think. Or maybe it shouldn’t. I don’t know if that says more about me or about society at large — and for my own mental health, I’m choosing not to dig any deeper on that one.
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