
Watch it happen:
Founded by Eva Herget & Jonathan Jenkins
Eva (CEO) — Left Goldman Sachs to go all-in on trading cards, before even considering applying to YC (or even really know what it was!) Hit $500K ARR in 3 months selling Pokémon cards. Runs the Pokemon-finance YouTube channel Eva’s Binder. Has written for PSA Pop Culture Magazine & TCGplayer Infinite. Absolutely addicted to shiny cardboard.
Jon (CTO) — Mathematician turned machine learning expert. Left his PhD in ML to build cutting-edge pricing algorithms for collectibles. Published researcher, now leveraging deep expertise in modeling and optimization to redefine asset valuation in collectibles.
Eva always loved trading cards—both as a collector and a player. When most people grew out of it in middle school, for some reason she never did. In college, she started making YouTube videos breaking down the financial side of Pokémon cards, from undervalued sets to spreadsheets showing the expected values of sealed products. Turns out, other people were into this too! Eva ended up writing for TCGplayer and PSA’s Pop Culture Magazine while working at Goldman Sachs, but as her side hustle selling cards grew, she realized she was making more from Pokémon than her day job. So in July 2024, Eva quit her high-paying job at Goldman to go all-in on selling shiny cardboard, before Misprint was even an idea.

Eva getting a signed poster at the 2024 Pokemon World Championship! So cool!!
By fall 2024, Eva was selling over $40K/month in cards with $16-20K in profit – but the process was painful. Sourcing inventory was inefficient, listing cards took forever, and pricing was a mess. She asked her best friend from Exeter, Jon, to helpher build a tool to price cards faster. As they gathered millions of sales for 200K+ unique cards, they realized they weren’t just solving Eva's problem – They were onto something bigger.
That’s when they decided to apply to YC (thanks to a push from her roommate, ty Prady!!). They got in, and this fun side project turned into their entire lives. Jon dropped out of his PhD, and Misprint was born – a real-time, transparent marketplace for trading cards. Now, they are building the future of collectibles, starting with Pokemon.
And now for the shill…
Right now, collectors rely on scattered, inconsistent data from eBay, auction houses, and forums to guess at card values. Marketplaces don’t provide real-time analytics, and pricing is often biased or outdated. This leads to unclear pricing and inefficient auctions that sell below market value.

Finally, here’s a bonus photo. If this doesn’t inspire confidence, they don’t know what will:
