Collector Crypt hits new weekly revenue ATH on Solana with $4.75M haul

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A platform that lets you rip open Pokémon card packs on the blockchain just posted $4.75 million in weekly revenue. That’s not a typo, and it’s not NFT-era hype from 2021. It’s happening right now on Solana.

Collector Crypt, which tokenizes graded physical trading cards and lets users trade, open, and redeem them on-chain, set a new all-time high for weekly revenue according to DeFiLlama. The number puts it in rare company among consumer-facing crypto applications, and it raises a question worth asking: is the intersection of physical collectibles and blockchain finally producing a business model that actually works?

What’s driving the numbers

During the record-breaking week, over 215,000 tokenized TCG pack openings were recorded on the platform. Think of it as a gacha system, the same randomized reward mechanic that prints money for mobile game publishers, except each pack contains tokenized representations of real, graded Pokémon cards that users can eventually redeem for the physical versions.

That gacha mechanic has been the engine behind Collector Crypt’s growth since it launched in December 2024. Collector Crypt recently integrated with Solflare wallet. That integration contributed to a 129% week-over-week increase in fees, suggesting that reducing friction in the onboarding process had a meaningful impact on transaction volume.

Cumulative trading volume on the platform crossed $1 billion by late May 2026.

The bigger picture: $60M and counting

Collector Crypt’s cumulative revenue crossed $50 million by mid-June 2026 and approached $60 million shortly after. On June 14, 2026, Collector Crypt distributed a quarterly airdrop of 15 million $CARDS tokens valued at approximately $4 million.

That combination of real revenue and token-based incentives is drawing comparisons to pump.fun, the Solana memecoin launcher that became one of the network’s most profitable applications.

What this means for investors

Collector Crypt’s performance matters beyond its own revenue line because it validates a category. Tokenized real-world assets, or RWAs, have mostly been discussed in the context of treasury bills and real estate. The idea that physical collectibles could be an equally viable RWA vertical is gaining credibility with every record Collector Crypt sets.

The risk side of the equation deserves attention too. Gacha mechanics can drive explosive short-term growth, but they also carry regulatory scrutiny in multiple jurisdictions. Randomized loot box systems have faced legal challenges in Europe and parts of Asia. The metric to watch going forward is whether weekly pack openings and trading volume maintain these elevated levels or whether this was a spike around the airdrop event on June 14.

For traders watching the $CARDS token, the quarterly airdrop structure creates a somewhat predictable cadence of supply increases that could pressure price if demand doesn’t keep pace.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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