Scalpers just hit a wall.
Starting today, Walmart caps you at five items total—packs and/or boxes of trading cards—per visit and online.
Why? Because one viral clip showed a buyer clearing out an entire Pokémon shelf while a manager let it ride. Backlash followed. Policy followed.
Understand: this wasn’t a press release. The memo went up on Walmart’s internal employee system. The timing suggests a direct response to last week’s blow-up.
“We are introducing this limit to make sure all fans and collectors have a fair opportunity to enjoy Trading Cards… to make popular items available to as many customers as possible and to maintain a safe and positive shopping environment for everyone.”
—Walmart
Will it actually curb scalping? Unknown. It slows hoarding. It doesn’t kill arbitrage.
Public Opinion on the Controversy
People suspect insider help. The manager (“Zay”) is accused of letting buddies clear shelves for a cut. Employees and vendors “creaming off the top,” Discord bot farms calling restocks, and family mules to dodge “per-person” caps—those are the working theories. The IRS angle even pops up: if you’re flipping at scale and not reporting, expect penalties. Net: this looks less like one greedy buyer and more like a mini-ecosystem—staff tips, bots, and loopholes—feeding scarcity.
And the limit? Most think it’s damage control—late, light, and uneven. Five items won’t stop bots online, and signs without enforcement (think Target rumors vs. strict behind-the-counter stores) won’t fix it in-store. Some want hard caps per UPC at the register, stock held behind counters, and blacklists for staff who leak intel. Others blame collectors who pay over MSRP—demand fuels scalping. The mood: cautiously glad Walmart “did something,” but bracing for shenanigans.