GameStop Corp. (GME) officially launched Power Packs on April 15, 2026. The platform is available at powerpacks.com and marks the company’s entry into the digital trading card space.
Power Packs works like this: a customer buys a digital pack, opens it online, and receives a PSA-graded physical card linked to that pack. The card lives in the PSA Vault until the customer decides what to do with it.
From there, customers have three options. They can sell the card back to GameStop instantly, have it shipped to their home, or sell it through PSA’s eBay integration.
GameStop Corp., GME
At launch, four categories are available — Pokémon, football, basketball, and baseball. Pack prices range from $25 at the low end to $2,500 at the top.
The launch comes after a mixed Q4 earnings report. GameStop beat earnings expectations with adjusted EPS of $0.49, well above the analyst estimate of $0.37.
Revenue, however, missed. The company posted $1.1 billion for the quarter, short of the $1.467 billion consensus and down 13.9% year-over-year from $1.283 billion.
Despite the revenue miss, adjusted operating income grew to $147.7 million, up from $84.4 million in Q4 of the prior year.
The PSA Vault partnership is a key part of the platform. Cards don’t physically ship until a customer requests it, which keeps the experience digital-first while the asset remains real and graded.
The eBay integration adds a secondary market angle. Customers can sell their PSA-graded cards directly through that channel, giving the platform a trading element beyond just buying packs.
Baird maintained its coverage of GameStop following the Q4 results. The firm updated its financial model to factor in retail sales expectations and the anticipated release of Grand Theft Auto in Q4 2026.
GameStop currently holds more cash than debt on its balance sheet. The company carries a market cap of around $10.5 billion.
GME stock was trading at $23.70 on Tuesday morning, up 1.3% on the day. The stock is up 16.5% year-to-date.
The 52-week range sits between $19.93 and $35.81. Short interest stands at 14% of the total float.
InvestingPro analysis has flagged the stock as currently overvalued relative to its Fair Value estimate.
It is not yet clear whether Power Packs will connect directly to GameStop’s broader M&A strategy, which has been a point of focus for investors.
The platform is live now at powerpacks.com.
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