I feel like "card Twitter" is always changing.
For a while, my feed turned into one giant classified ad. I went to work trying to turn off retweets and likes from certain followers, as that was usually the culprit of these showing up. I don't mind seeing these once in a while, but a constant barrage of sales, especially from people I don't know, got on my nerves a little.
My new challenge is now group breaks. I feel like every other Twitter post is from some sort of group breaker that I have no interest in following.
I like some forms of group breaking, but most of it isn't for me. I don't like the horror stories of getting zero cards shipped to you if there isn't a big hit. I don't like some of the shady business of cards getting swapped out for others, or something being opened off camera like that one dude did with the mini football helmet. I know the vast majority are good people, but I'm sure there are several who give them all a bad rap.
This is to not criticize those who participate in these sorts of breaks. It's the way many collect, and that is fine. If that's what makes you happy, then by all means.
I recently quote-tweeted one of these stories about group break shadiness saying that this is why I didn't like them, and Colbey from Cardboard Collections aptly pointed out "except my group breaks." Of course not! Here I am talking about what I don't like about these breaks, when I frequently have bought into group breaks hosted by Colbey or Nachos Grande. But to me, those are much, much different. I trust the people running them, and I trust they are running them as collectors and not big hit chasers. You always know what you're getting with these guys.
Colbey famously runs his "affordable group break" every month or so, and you always get every card of your claimed team. Recently, I had the Yankees + random second team in a 1995-ish product break. The second team I drew was the White Sox.
The highlight for me in this break was 1995 Zenith, and easily the best pull was this rookie (but not his true RC, which were in 1993) of Derek Jeter. The card looks amazing and I'm so glad it was pulled from the break.
1995 Summit was a fun part of the break. I've gotten some of these in trades over the years, but never would have found any growing up. I'm guessing they were in hobby shops mostly? They definitely weren't at CVS.
The third product was Sportflix, which was actually a pretty solid looking set in '95.
As I mentioned, my random second team was the White Sox, which I was pretty happy about because I figured Id'd get some decent Frank Thomas cards. Back in 1995, you wanted to pull cards of Thomas, Griffey, and Piazza. Those were the three. And luckily Thomas well represented in each product:
Pretty good!
And a good break. Colbey, I promise I'll stay in your breaks as long as your promise to keep shipping all the cards!
I collected baseball cards from the late '80s through 2002. Then I went to college and when I came out, I was lost. There were too many brands, sets, choices, relics, autos, parallels, variations. It was a turn off. However, I slowly made my way back. So here is my attempt to venture back into the hobby. I'll buy a few packs of cards here and there, comment on some cards I have, send out some TTMs, and follow the progress of my Topps Yankees Project.
I busted a ton of that stuff (boxes) back in the day.
ReplyDeleteGroup breaks aren't really my thing... but I was fortunate enough to pull a Gehrig bat card from one of Colbey's breaks. I think that was the last or second to last group break I've participated in. Kinda feel like I should walk away on a high note.
ReplyDeleteI love hosting group breaks but I agree with your general sentiment, if the host is looking to make a profit watch out. Colbey and I both like to bust older boxes too (for which the "value" is the neat cards, not crazy autographs or other big hit stuff).
ReplyDeleteI am so tired of all of the breakers on Twitter, there seems to be no end to them, they just keep showing up! I probably sound like a d***, but I don't care about them, or whatever it is that they're breaking next.
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