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Pulse Baseball Cards: The Hobby’s Newest Brand

If you’ve been browsing the card aisle at your local hobby shop lately, you may have spotted a relatively new name on the shelf: Pulse. With bold designs, autograph-heavy boxes, and a collector-first philosophy, Pulse Baseball cards have made a genuine splash since their debut in 2024. For collectors who are curious but not quite
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Jeff Kent Cards: The Top 5 (HOF 2026)

Few stories in recent hobby history have played out quite like Jeff Kent’s. For a decade, his name sat on the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot and generated debate without ever clearing the 75 percent threshold needed for Cooperstown. Then, in December 2025, the Contemporary Baseball Era Committee changed everything. Kent earned 14 of
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1934 Goudey Baseball Cards: Inside Story

The year 1934 was not an easy one for America. The Great Depression had millions of families cutting corners, and luxuries were hard to come by. Yet somehow, a Boston candy company managed to produce one of the most beloved baseball card sets in the history of the hobby. The 1934 Goudey set did not
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Best Mickey Mantle Cards (Top 10)

Few names in the baseball card hobby carry the weight of Mickey Mantle. From the moment Topps launched its first flagship set in 1952, The Mick stood at the top of the price guide. He never left. Flip through a vintage Beckett from any decade, page to a 1950s or 1960s set, and you almost
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1987 Donruss Barry Bonds Opening Day Error Card: Inside Story

Some baseball cards earn their place in hobby history through breathtaking photography, iconic design, or the sheer greatness of the player pictured. And then there is card #163 from the 1987 Donruss Opening Day set – a card that made history precisely because it pictures the wrong player entirely. The 1987 Donruss Barry Bonds Opening