GameStop is launching a new digital trading card platform on Wednesday, April 15th, and investors are watching closely to see whether it could become a new growth driver.
The company’s new Power Packs platform combines digital purchases with real PSA-graded physical cards, giving GameStop a new way to tap into the booming collectibles market.
Here’s why the launch could matter more than many investors realize.
GameStop debuts PSA-backed digital card packs
GameStop released a statement on Tuesday, April 14, announcing that it will publicly launch Power Packs on April 15, offering digital packs priced from $25 to $2,500 that unlock real PSA-graded trading cards.
These are not purely digital collectibles. Buyers receive authenticated physical cards stored in the PSA Vault unless they request shipment, and GameStop says users can hold them, ship them, or sell them back instantly.
Trust and liquidity matter heavily in trading cards. PSA grading, offered by Professional Sports Authenticator (PSA), verifies a card’s authenticity and condition to help build buyer confidence, while vault storage reduces fulfillment friction, and instant resale creates a faster path to turnover.
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Management has yet to disclose revenue targets, adoption goals, or pack-level economics, so investors cannot yet model a meaningful earnings contribution. As a company, GameStop generated $1.104 billion in fourth-quarter 2025 revenue.
Competing in a crowded collectibles market
GameStop is entering a collectibles market already dominated by major platforms like eBay and Whatnot, but Power Packs takes a noticeably different approach.
Rather than trying to compete on breadth within the marketplace, GameStop is focusing on a narrower transaction where trust and ease of resale matter most.

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The platform also allows cards to be sold back to GameStop instantly or resold through PSA’s eBay integration, creating a smoother path to liquidity.
If collectors believe cards can be resold quickly at reasonable spreads, Power Packs could appeal to a much broader mainstream audience. If resale liquidity proves weak, however, the platform risks looking more like another niche retail offering than a scalable marketplace.
CEO’s incentives may shape GameStop’s future
Another factor investors continue to watch is management’s long-term incentive structure. CEO Ryan Cohen’s recently proposed compensation package is heavily tied to aggressive performance targets, with vesting linked to substantial market capitalization and EBITDA milestones over time.
Under the proposed plan, Cohen would receive no salary, cash bonuses, or guaranteed pay. Instead, his compensation would come entirely through stock options, granting him the right to purchase more than 171.5 million shares at $20.66 each, with vesting tied to GameStop meeting ambitious long-term performance targets, in a structure similar to Elon Musk’s prior compensation package at Tesla.
For the award to vest in full, GameStop must reach a $100 billion market capitalization, up from roughly $9.3 billion today, and generate $10 billion in cumulative performance EBITDA. If achieved, the options could be worth approximately $35 billion before exercise costs.
Given GameStop’s sizable cash position, the market continues to speculate that the company could eventually look toward acquisitions or broader capital deployment if attractive opportunities emerge.
Stock move suggests investors remain cautious
Despite the launch, GameStop shares rose just 2.7% on April 14, with the stock recently trading around $24.
Given GameStop’s history of sharp event-driven volatility and its 52-week trading range of $19.93 to $35.81, that muted reaction suggests the market views Power Packs as an interesting concept rather than something likely to materially impact near-term earnings.
Investors still want proof that the platform can drive real customer adoption, healthy resale activity, and economics that scale better than the company’s traditional retail business.
Short interest remains another factor to watch, sitting at over 14% of float. That leaves room for outsized moves if rollout data surprises to the upside.
For now, though, investors appear to view Power Packs as optional upside rather than a change to the broader earnings story.
What could send GameStop higher
- Power Packs sees adoption beyond the initial launch period and boosts higher-margin collectibles revenue
- Strong resale activity drives repeat transactions and creates marketplace-like recurring economics
- Broader pricing tiers attract both casual buyers and higher-end collectors
- Engagement metrics show collectibles can become a scalable platform rather than a niche offering
- Investors begin assigning standalone value to GameStop’s collectibles business rather than treating it as optionality
What could derail the bull case
- Management deploys capital into low-return initiatives that weaken the balance sheet
- Weak sell-through or slow resale activity leaves collectibles too small to impact results
- Poor liquidity reduces retention and repeat purchase behavior
- Shipping, custody, or authentication issues damage trust in the platform
- Core retail revenue declines faster than new categories can offset the weakness
GameStop key takeaways
GameStop’s Power Packs launch gives the company a new way to expand deeper into collectibles, but investors still need proof that the platform can drive meaningful adoption and repeat usage.
If the model gains traction, it could help GameStop build a higher-margin, more recurring revenue stream beyond traditional retail.
If engagement disappoints, however, the launch may end up being viewed as another small side project rather than a true growth driver.
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