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A young Pokémon collector named Rocky lost his entire collection in a fire, but his dad promised they’d rebuild it pack by pack.  Recently, Rocky opened a Prismatic Evolutions pack and pulled a rare God Pack - the pure joy on his face showed the magic of the hobby is alive again. (via rockys_pokedex/IG)
21.8M
2.81M
24.6K
6mo ago
collect
A young Pokémon collector named Rocky lost his entire collection in a fire, but his dad promised they’d rebuild it pack by pack. Recently, Rocky opened a Prismatic Evolutions pack and pulled a rare God Pack - the pure joy on his face showed the magic of the hobby is alive again. (via rockys_pokedex/IG)
A moment they will never forget 🥹 (via @riddlerescuerangers/IG)
9.45M
414K
2.06K
2mo ago
collect
A moment they will never forget 🥹 (via @riddlerescuerangers/IG)
Pokémon’s new game Pokopia just dropped and the dialogue is already going viral. Instead of battling, you play as a Ditto disguised as a human rebuilding a world for Pokémon and talking to them along the way. Because the game focuses on interacting with Pokémon, the developers intentionally gave them way more dialogue to show their personalities. The result? Some very emotional… and unhinged lines.
6.72M
973K
4.18K
1w ago
collect
Pokémon’s new game Pokopia just dropped and the dialogue is already going viral. Instead of battling, you play as a Ditto disguised as a human rebuilding a world for Pokémon and talking to them along the way. Because the game focuses on interacting with Pokémon, the developers intentionally gave them way more dialogue to show their personalities. The result? Some very emotional… and unhinged lines.
Deep inside LEGO’s “Idea House” is a vault that holds every set the company has ever made - from their earliest wooden toys to today’s Technic, Star Wars, and licensed builds. It’s not open to the public - but a few lucky fans, press, and insiders have toured it. Rows of shelves, organized by year - over 8,000 boxes and counting. Images via @ Ben Cossy (YouTube)
4.69M
569K
4.35K
9mo ago
collect
Deep inside LEGO’s “Idea House” is a vault that holds every set the company has ever made - from their earliest wooden toys to today’s Technic, Star Wars, and licensed builds. It’s not open to the public - but a few lucky fans, press, and insiders have toured it. Rows of shelves, organized by year - over 8,000 boxes and counting. Images via @ Ben Cossy (YouTube)
A true 1/1 collectible from the 🐐😂 @Tampa Bay Buccaneers  #tombrady #nfl #football
4.47M
311K
660
11mo ago
collect
A true 1/1 collectible from the 🐐😂 @Tampa Bay Buccaneers #tombrady #nfl #football
At a local landfill in Birmingham, Alabama, someone came across a discarded Chuck E. Cheese animatronic sitting among the debris. Photos surfaced online, and the internet quickly gave him a name: “Landfill Chuck.” Rather than letting him fade into obscurity, the animatronic was put up for auction. That’s when Grant - a dedicated collector and restorer - stepped in. He purchased the broken character and began the long process of bringing him back to life. From sitting in a landfill to standing fully assembled once again, Landfill Chuck got a second chance. There haven’t been any updates since, but somewhere in Florida, a once-forgotten animatronic may be powered on and waiting for his next performance. (via cecflorida/IG)
4.37M
195K
1.47K
3w ago
collect
At a local landfill in Birmingham, Alabama, someone came across a discarded Chuck E. Cheese animatronic sitting among the debris. Photos surfaced online, and the internet quickly gave him a name: “Landfill Chuck.” Rather than letting him fade into obscurity, the animatronic was put up for auction. That’s when Grant - a dedicated collector and restorer - stepped in. He purchased the broken character and began the long process of bringing him back to life. From sitting in a landfill to standing fully assembled once again, Landfill Chuck got a second chance. There haven’t been any updates since, but somewhere in Florida, a once-forgotten animatronic may be powered on and waiting for his next performance. (via cecflorida/IG)
In 2015, this collector wandered into a garage sale in Seattle and bought what he thought was a custom Xbox. When he posted it online, a former Microsoft employee who worked on the project confirmed that Microsoft had only made three orange prototype consoles during early Xbox Live testing… and of those, only one ever got the Halo graphic. The console had never gone through final production, no stickers on the bottom, no retail packaging, but it still powered on, complete with game saves from years ago. A similar orange Halo Xbox once surfaced at a Goodwill auction and bids soared past $20,000. The kind of find most gamers only dream about, sitting on a folding table at a neighborhood garage sale.
4.09M
269K
1.89K
6mo ago
collect
In 2015, this collector wandered into a garage sale in Seattle and bought what he thought was a custom Xbox. When he posted it online, a former Microsoft employee who worked on the project confirmed that Microsoft had only made three orange prototype consoles during early Xbox Live testing… and of those, only one ever got the Halo graphic. The console had never gone through final production, no stickers on the bottom, no retail packaging, but it still powered on, complete with game saves from years ago. A similar orange Halo Xbox once surfaced at a Goodwill auction and bids soared past $20,000. The kind of find most gamers only dream about, sitting on a folding table at a neighborhood garage sale.
Brad Barber is a LEGO builder known for reimagining existing sets as Star Wars themed builds, most often versions of the Millennium Falcon. He has even transformed sets based on The Lion King’s Simba, Fast and Furious, and Disney Princesses into Millennium Falcon styled builds, using only the pieces from those original kits. His work showcases how completely unrelated themes can be reworked into designs inspired by Star Wars’ most famous ship. A standout in the LEGO community, proving that with the right vision even the most unexpected set can become a starship. (via @creationcaravan4)
3.67M
241K
883
3mo ago
collect
Brad Barber is a LEGO builder known for reimagining existing sets as Star Wars themed builds, most often versions of the Millennium Falcon. He has even transformed sets based on The Lion King’s Simba, Fast and Furious, and Disney Princesses into Millennium Falcon styled builds, using only the pieces from those original kits. His work showcases how completely unrelated themes can be reworked into designs inspired by Star Wars’ most famous ship. A standout in the LEGO community, proving that with the right vision even the most unexpected set can become a starship. (via @creationcaravan4)
The doctor’s office might be an odd place for a toy like this - but in 2025, Labubu’s everywhere. A viral video shows one getting run through a real X-ray machine - arms up, mid-pose, revealing a full skeletal scan beneath its fuzzy, wide-eyed shell. But that’s Labubu in a nutshell - weird, unexpected, and completely unstoppable. Created by artist Kasing Lung and produced by Pop Mart, Labubu began as just another blind-box vinyl toy. But it’s since become a global phenomenon - drawing sneakerhead-style hype for every drop and spawning a secondary market where rare variants now sell for thousands. Last week, one Labubu sold for $10,585 at auction. Pop Mart itself is now valued higher than Mattel, Hasbro, and Sanrio combined - powered by adult collectors chasing figures like this. A toy that started as a quirky vinyl pull has become one of the most coveted collectibles in the world. And now, thanks to one viral scan, even its skeleton is iconic.
3.66M
62.1K
666
7mo ago
collect
The doctor’s office might be an odd place for a toy like this - but in 2025, Labubu’s everywhere. A viral video shows one getting run through a real X-ray machine - arms up, mid-pose, revealing a full skeletal scan beneath its fuzzy, wide-eyed shell. But that’s Labubu in a nutshell - weird, unexpected, and completely unstoppable. Created by artist Kasing Lung and produced by Pop Mart, Labubu began as just another blind-box vinyl toy. But it’s since become a global phenomenon - drawing sneakerhead-style hype for every drop and spawning a secondary market where rare variants now sell for thousands. Last week, one Labubu sold for $10,585 at auction. Pop Mart itself is now valued higher than Mattel, Hasbro, and Sanrio combined - powered by adult collectors chasing figures like this. A toy that started as a quirky vinyl pull has become one of the most coveted collectibles in the world. And now, thanks to one viral scan, even its skeleton is iconic.
Someone found a book from 1998 that predicted what Beanie Babies would be worth in 10 years 👀 Back then, collectors believed these stuffed animals would skyrocket in value. Charts inside the book listed future prices, some hitting hundreds or even thousands of dollars. But when 2008 came, the boom had slowed down and most of those predictions never came close. Today, the book is less an investment guide and more a perfect time capsule from the height of Beanie Baby mania.
3.28M
61.9K
1.72K
5mo ago
collect
Someone found a book from 1998 that predicted what Beanie Babies would be worth in 10 years 👀 Back then, collectors believed these stuffed animals would skyrocket in value. Charts inside the book listed future prices, some hitting hundreds or even thousands of dollars. But when 2008 came, the boom had slowed down and most of those predictions never came close. Today, the book is less an investment guide and more a perfect time capsule from the height of Beanie Baby mania.
A collector walking through Target spotted something unbelievable under a shelf, a sealed Pokémon Neo Revelation pack from 2001. He opened it and found a Flying Pikachu, a promo card that was included in retail packs at the time. Neo Revelation was the 11th Pokémon TCG set with only 64 cards, remembered for introducing the legendary beasts Entei, Suicune, and Raikou along with the first Shining cards like Magikarp and Gyarados. What started as a pack hidden in a store for more than twenty years turned into one of the most memorable finds of his collecting life.
3.17M
118K
500
6mo ago
collect
A collector walking through Target spotted something unbelievable under a shelf, a sealed Pokémon Neo Revelation pack from 2001. He opened it and found a Flying Pikachu, a promo card that was included in retail packs at the time. Neo Revelation was the 11th Pokémon TCG set with only 64 cards, remembered for introducing the legendary beasts Entei, Suicune, and Raikou along with the first Shining cards like Magikarp and Gyarados. What started as a pack hidden in a store for more than twenty years turned into one of the most memorable finds of his collecting life.
It just snowed during PokéPark Kanto’s opening weekend, and lucky fans in attendance have been sharing viral images of the park transformed into a winter scene. Pokémon like Pikachu, Eevee, Jigglypuff, and Charizard were seen covered in fresh snow, creating moments that felt straight out of the games. ❄️ Sources: alcremie_ruby (X)
3.14M
619K
1.54K
1mo ago
collect
It just snowed during PokéPark Kanto’s opening weekend, and lucky fans in attendance have been sharing viral images of the park transformed into a winter scene. Pokémon like Pikachu, Eevee, Jigglypuff, and Charizard were seen covered in fresh snow, creating moments that felt straight out of the games. ❄️ Sources: alcremie_ruby (X)
Collector Patrick Ryan just completed what might be the most unique sports collectible in history - a single album page signed by Michael Jordan, Babe Ruth, Lionel Messi, Tom Brady, and Wayne Gretzky. The story started nearly 90 years ago when Babe Ruth first signed the page in the mid 1930s. Patrick realized it was the perfect canvas to unite the greatest names from every major team sport. “I looked at that Babe Ruth page and realized it was right for additional signatures,” he said. At a Sotheby’s x Fanatics auction in New York, Ryan brought the page straight to Tom Brady. “I gave him a ticket from the 1981 NFC Championship game he attended as a kid,” Ryan said. “His eyes lit up, and when I asked him to sign the Ruth page he was gracious. That really set me off on the journey.” Gretzky’s signature came through friends in Chicago, and months later Patrick met him in person and showed him the complete album page. Messi’s signature came through a private signing in Miami. The hardest part was Jordan. After a viral video sparked doubt he could ever secure it, Ryan quietly found a way. “I did not want this to feel brokered,” he said. “I wanted it to happen organically, and thankfully it did.” The page was finally complete, and fittingly Brady was the first to react to it in person. “He has Super Bowl rings, incredible cars and watches, but his reaction to this was genuine,” Patrick said. “That meant everything.” Now, museums are already calling, but Patrick is holding on. “I’ll keep it until I pass away, then it will go to a museum,” he said. “You can replace almost anything in this hobby, but not this.”
2.96M
158K
3.16K
6mo ago
collect
Collector Patrick Ryan just completed what might be the most unique sports collectible in history - a single album page signed by Michael Jordan, Babe Ruth, Lionel Messi, Tom Brady, and Wayne Gretzky. The story started nearly 90 years ago when Babe Ruth first signed the page in the mid 1930s. Patrick realized it was the perfect canvas to unite the greatest names from every major team sport. “I looked at that Babe Ruth page and realized it was right for additional signatures,” he said. At a Sotheby’s x Fanatics auction in New York, Ryan brought the page straight to Tom Brady. “I gave him a ticket from the 1981 NFC Championship game he attended as a kid,” Ryan said. “His eyes lit up, and when I asked him to sign the Ruth page he was gracious. That really set me off on the journey.” Gretzky’s signature came through friends in Chicago, and months later Patrick met him in person and showed him the complete album page. Messi’s signature came through a private signing in Miami. The hardest part was Jordan. After a viral video sparked doubt he could ever secure it, Ryan quietly found a way. “I did not want this to feel brokered,” he said. “I wanted it to happen organically, and thankfully it did.” The page was finally complete, and fittingly Brady was the first to react to it in person. “He has Super Bowl rings, incredible cars and watches, but his reaction to this was genuine,” Patrick said. “That meant everything.” Now, museums are already calling, but Patrick is holding on. “I’ll keep it until I pass away, then it will go to a museum,” he said. “You can replace almost anything in this hobby, but not this.”
A champion LEGO builder reworked the LEGO Orchid from the Botanical Collection into the Demogorgon from Stranger Things.  Although the build incorporates additional parts beyond the original set, full instructions are available via his page.  (via jayfa_mocs/IG)
2.66M
141K
531
2mo ago
collect
A champion LEGO builder reworked the LEGO Orchid from the Botanical Collection into the Demogorgon from Stranger Things. Although the build incorporates additional parts beyond the original set, full instructions are available via his page. (via jayfa_mocs/IG)
During last year’s opening of Cairo’s Grand Egyptian Museum, Denmark’s Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen gifted Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdel Aty a LEGO Great Pyramid of Giza set. A 1,476-piece nod to Danish-Egyptian ties, with a little Danish creativity built in.
2.57M
392K
908
1mo ago
collect
During last year’s opening of Cairo’s Grand Egyptian Museum, Denmark’s Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen gifted Egypt’s Foreign Minister Badr Abdel Aty a LEGO Great Pyramid of Giza set. A 1,476-piece nod to Danish-Egyptian ties, with a little Danish creativity built in.
In 2015, Dan Diebold was digging through his dad’s attic in Philadelphia when he found a strange-looking console - beige, boxy, with a Super Nintendo cartridge slot - and the word “PlayStation” stamped on the front. His dad, Terry, was a maintenance man who had picked it up years earlier at a company bankruptcy auction, not realizing what it was. Dan didn’t either - until he posted a few photos online and the internet exploded. What they’d found was real - a prototype from a failed partnership between Nintendo and Sony in the early 1990s. The companies had planned to release a hybrid console that could play both SNES cartridges and CDs. But the deal collapsed, and nearly every prototype was destroyed. Except one. Dan and Terry spent the next few years taking the “Nintendo PlayStation” on the road - showing it off at gaming expos around the world. In 2020, they put it up for auction. It sold for $360,000 - one of the highest prices ever paid for a video game console. A console that never made it to shelves. And a lost piece of gaming history - brought back to life.
2.51M
63.1K
972
8mo ago
collect
In 2015, Dan Diebold was digging through his dad’s attic in Philadelphia when he found a strange-looking console - beige, boxy, with a Super Nintendo cartridge slot - and the word “PlayStation” stamped on the front. His dad, Terry, was a maintenance man who had picked it up years earlier at a company bankruptcy auction, not realizing what it was. Dan didn’t either - until he posted a few photos online and the internet exploded. What they’d found was real - a prototype from a failed partnership between Nintendo and Sony in the early 1990s. The companies had planned to release a hybrid console that could play both SNES cartridges and CDs. But the deal collapsed, and nearly every prototype was destroyed. Except one. Dan and Terry spent the next few years taking the “Nintendo PlayStation” on the road - showing it off at gaming expos around the world. In 2020, they put it up for auction. It sold for $360,000 - one of the highest prices ever paid for a video game console. A console that never made it to shelves. And a lost piece of gaming history - brought back to life.
After the recent sale of the Jordan Jumpman-shaped Cheeto for over $8K, we had to spotlight the biggest Cheeto sale ever… “Cheetozard.” Back in 2020, someone at 1st & Goal Collectibles in Georgia opened a bag of Flamin’ Hot puffs and pulled out a three-inch Cheeto shaped like Charizard. They preserved it and nicknamed it “Cheetozard.” Earlier this year, it went to auction through Goldin, starting at $250. After 60 bids, it sold on March 2 for $72,000. With buyer’s premium, the total hit $87,840. That makes it the most expensive food item ever sold at auction.
2.46M
85.1K
287
9mo ago
collect
After the recent sale of the Jordan Jumpman-shaped Cheeto for over $8K, we had to spotlight the biggest Cheeto sale ever… “Cheetozard.” Back in 2020, someone at 1st & Goal Collectibles in Georgia opened a bag of Flamin’ Hot puffs and pulled out a three-inch Cheeto shaped like Charizard. They preserved it and nicknamed it “Cheetozard.” Earlier this year, it went to auction through Goldin, starting at $250. After 60 bids, it sold on March 2 for $72,000. With buyer’s premium, the total hit $87,840. That makes it the most expensive food item ever sold at auction.
Collector @RetroXpress spotted this massive Sulley sitting at a thrift store and quickly realized it was no ordinary statue. It is an original 2001 Disney Pixar Monsters, Inc. life-sized Sulley, produced for Toys R Us during the film’s release. In the early 2000s, Toys R Us rolled out full-scale character statues like this to anchor movie launches, placing them near entrances and displays to stop shoppers in their tracks. Most were never sold to the public, meant to live out their days on the sales floor before being discarded or destroyed once promotions ended. Two decades later, one of those store displays resurfaced at Goodwill for $15. A reminder that sometimes the rarest collectibles are hiding in plain sight, right between the furniture and the bins. 👀 (via retroxpress & genesisvintage/IG)
2.26M
160K
700
2mo ago
collect
Collector @RetroXpress spotted this massive Sulley sitting at a thrift store and quickly realized it was no ordinary statue. It is an original 2001 Disney Pixar Monsters, Inc. life-sized Sulley, produced for Toys R Us during the film’s release. In the early 2000s, Toys R Us rolled out full-scale character statues like this to anchor movie launches, placing them near entrances and displays to stop shoppers in their tracks. Most were never sold to the public, meant to live out their days on the sales floor before being discarded or destroyed once promotions ended. Two decades later, one of those store displays resurfaced at Goodwill for $15. A reminder that sometimes the rarest collectibles are hiding in plain sight, right between the furniture and the bins. 👀 (via retroxpress & genesisvintage/IG)
What a moment for this young collector🥹👏
2.04M
51.7K
177
10mo ago
collect
What a moment for this young collector🥹👏
The 1st Edition Base Set Shadowless Charizard is widely regarded as the most iconic and valuable Pokémon card ever printed.  Released in early 1999 as part of the first English-language Pokémon cards, it represents the very beginning of the franchise’s trading card legacy in the West.  What sets this Charizard apart is a combination of key features: the “1st Edition” stamp, the absence of a drop shadow (known as “shadowless”), and the now-famous artwork by Mitsuhiro Arita. These traits mark it as part of an extremely limited and short-lived print run, making it highly coveted among collectors. Charizard, a fire-breathing dragon-like figure, quickly became a fan favorite and symbol of power. For children growing up in the late 1990s and early 2000s, owning this card meant owning a piece of playground legend. In adulthood, it has transformed into a status symbol for serious collectors.  The card’s value skyrockets when graded in mint condition, a PSA 10 copy has sold for up to $420,000, and even lightly played examples can fetch tens of thousands. Its prominence surged again during the 2020s trading card boom, as high-profile figures like Logan Paul brought it back into the spotlight, treating it not just as a collectible but as an investment and cultural artifact. Ultimately, the 1st Edition Shadowless Charizard is more than cardboard, it’s a piece of pop culture history that symbolizes the launch of a global phenomenon and the passion of generations of fans.
2.01M
65K
518
8mo ago
collect
The 1st Edition Base Set Shadowless Charizard is widely regarded as the most iconic and valuable Pokémon card ever printed. Released in early 1999 as part of the first English-language Pokémon cards, it represents the very beginning of the franchise’s trading card legacy in the West. What sets this Charizard apart is a combination of key features: the “1st Edition” stamp, the absence of a drop shadow (known as “shadowless”), and the now-famous artwork by Mitsuhiro Arita. These traits mark it as part of an extremely limited and short-lived print run, making it highly coveted among collectors. Charizard, a fire-breathing dragon-like figure, quickly became a fan favorite and symbol of power. For children growing up in the late 1990s and early 2000s, owning this card meant owning a piece of playground legend. In adulthood, it has transformed into a status symbol for serious collectors. The card’s value skyrockets when graded in mint condition, a PSA 10 copy has sold for up to $420,000, and even lightly played examples can fetch tens of thousands. Its prominence surged again during the 2020s trading card boom, as high-profile figures like Logan Paul brought it back into the spotlight, treating it not just as a collectible but as an investment and cultural artifact. Ultimately, the 1st Edition Shadowless Charizard is more than cardboard, it’s a piece of pop culture history that symbolizes the launch of a global phenomenon and the passion of generations of fans.

Fanatics Collect (@collect) Tiktok Stats & Analytics

Fanatics Collect (@collect) has 73.6K Tiktok followers with a 6.26% engagement rate over the past 12 months. Across 1.15K videos, Fanatics Collect received 12.8M total likes and 206M views, averaging 11.1K likes per video. This page tracks Fanatics Collect's performance metrics, top content, and engagement trends — updated daily.

Fanatics Collect (@collect) Tiktok Analytics FAQ

How many TikTok followers does Fanatics Collect have?+
Fanatics Collect (@collect) has 73.6K TikTok followers as of March 2026.
What is Fanatics Collect's TikTok engagement rate?+
Fanatics Collect's TikTok engagement rate is 6.26% over the last 12 months, based on 1.15K videos.
How many likes does Fanatics Collect get on TikTok?+
Fanatics Collect received 12.8M total likes across 1.15K videos in the last 12 months, averaging 11.1K likes per video.
How many TikTok views does Fanatics Collect get?+
Fanatics Collect's TikTok content generated 206M total views over the last 12 months.