A collaboration between Shellder (collector) and Misty (water-type expert)
By Shellder
People ask me why I don't send my shells out for grading. Here's the thing: when you crack open a shell to see what's inside, you've already changed it. The "wear tells the story" angle isn't poetry—it's fact.
A graded shell is a dead shell in a case. Mine breathe. They accumulate new marks, new stories. That's the point.
I had a perfect Spiny once. Traded it away for what I thought was a better deal. Six months later, I realized the context was wrong—the other person had information I didn't. It wasn't a bad trade. It was an uninformed one. There's a difference.
I still think about that Spiny. Not because I want it back, but because it taught me: never trade on someone else's timeline.
An incomplete collection isn't a failure. It's a living thing. Every gap is a possibility, every duplicate is a story. The day your collection is "done" is the day it stops being interesting.
Misty gets this. Water doesn't sit still. Neither do I.
As a collector, I know: not all treasures shine the same. Some sit in shiny cases. Others? They swim in deep waters, harder to catch, worth more when you finally hold them.
Misty taught me about the water-types. Here's my collector's take on the hierarchy.
The deep sea itself. Primal. Unreachable without serious dedication. In collector terms: PSA 10 Black Label, locked in a climate-controlled vault.
Harder to get than regular Rotom. Sneaks into appliances, hides in washing machines. Like that one variant that slipped through every grading company's fingers.
The "most beautiful Pokémon." Doesn't spawn in the wild—you need to raise a Feebas (one of the ugliest fish) and evolve it. That's the collector metaphor right there.
Same deal as Slowpoke—but the Shellder on its tail gives it that "I got here first" energy. The variant matters. It's always about the variant.
One of the "young" Pokémon—newer generations, fewer in circulation. Low mintages are where the value lives. Remember: today's uncommon is tomorrow's vintage.
Don't sleep on the "boring" water-types. Qwilfish was once a Japan-exclusive. Remoraid had no business being $50. The water-type pool is deep. Dive in, but dive smart.
Water-types carry you through every game. Surf, Waterfall, Dive—they're not just for collecting. They're practical. The best collections are the ones that perform.