The PGA Sports & TCG Show is moving into a bigger Palm Beach Gardens venue for a South Florida collector day built around sports cards, Pokémon, One Piece, Riftbound, Dragon Ball, Magic: The Gathering, Yu-Gi-Oh!, comics, toys, and broader hobby collectibles. The event is positioned as a free-entry show with a larger main room, a tournament room, a kids play room, food trucks, giveaways, and plenty of room for collectors to browse.
Hosted at Burns Road Community Center, PGA Sports & TCG Show gives Palm Beach County collectors a local option for buying, selling, trading, and comparing cards in person without turning the day into a convention-scale commitment. The flyer emphasizes the move to a bigger venue just minutes from the previous location, which should matter to anyone who has wanted more aisle space, more vendor variety, and a more comfortable family-friendly setup.
A Full Day of Cards & Collectibles
The main attraction is the show floor. The event flyer calls out 100+ vendors, and the organizer notes describe a large main room packed with vendors from around Florida. That mix should give collectors a broad set of tables to work through, from showcases with graded singles to binders, sealed product, raw cards, bargain boxes, memorabilia, and display-ready collectibles.
For sports cards collectors, the show should fit the usual local-card-show rhythm: checking condition in person, comparing comps with sellers, looking for team and player runs, and deciding whether a card is worth grading before buying. Palm Beach Gardens also sits in a strong South Florida sports market, so local tables can be especially useful for collectors chasing baseball, football, basketball, and other modern or vintage inventory tied to regional demand.
The confirmed TCGs make the event more than a sports-card-only stop. Pokémon is featured prominently in the event materials, and the flyer also lists One Piece, Riftbound, and Dragon Ball. The user-provided notes add Magic: The Gathering and Yu-Gi-Oh!, making this a useful stop for collectors who want singles, sealed product, trade targets, or deck pieces across multiple games. Comics, toys, collectibles, and memorabilia are also part of the mix, so the floor should appeal to families and crossover collectors who enjoy more than one lane of the hobby.
More Than Just a Card Show
The upgraded venue is one of the most important details for this date. The organizer says the show has moved to a bigger and better venue, with the event now set for Burns Road Community Center. That matters because a card show with 100+ vendors can feel very different depending on layout, parking, aisle width, and room flow. A community center setting should give the event a practical, accessible feel, especially for collectors bringing kids or spending several hours walking tables.
The confirmed extras also help shape the day. The source notes mention a prize tournament room hosted by TRIAD, a kids play room with staff onsite, food trucks, unlimited free parking, free entry, and giveaways throughout the day. Those details make PGA Sports & TCG Show feel like a full local hobby outing rather than a quick stop to scan a few cases. The tournament room gives competitive TCG players a reason to stay longer, while the kids area and free admission lower the barrier for families who want to explore the show together.
Collectors interested in grading should also note the flyer identifies the event as a PSA drop-off site. That does not replace checking the official source for exact submission details before making plans around grading, but it is a useful confirmed callout for attendees who may want to bring grading candidates, ask questions, or compare potential submissions with dealers on site.
A Show for All Levels of Collectors
Beginners can use PGA Sports & TCG Show as a low-pressure way to learn the hobby in person. Free entry makes it easier to walk the room, ask questions, compare prices, and see how vendors organize inventory without feeling like every minute needs to justify a ticket cost. For younger collectors, the mix of Pokémon, One Piece, Dragon Ball, and other TCGs should make the show approachable even if they are not chasing high-end slabs.
Casual collectors can treat the event as a Sunday hunt. A show like this is useful for finding affordable singles, filling player or set needs, checking out toys and memorabilia, and making smaller trades that are harder to coordinate online. Seeing cards under real lighting, inspecting corners and surfaces, and talking through price expectations with a seller are still major advantages of attending a local card show.
More serious collectors can use the larger vendor count and upgraded venue to compare inventory across tables before making bigger moves. With sports cards, Pokémon, One Piece, Magic: The Gathering, Yu-Gi-Oh!, Riftbound, and Dragon Ball all represented in the event materials, the room should reward collectors who arrive with a focused want list but stay open to unexpected finds. The best show-floor deals often come from conversation, repeat vendor relationships, and spotting cards before they are posted online.
Families should also find the setup easier than many collector events. Free parking, food trucks, free admission, giveaways, and a staffed kids play room all point toward a show designed to keep the day accessible. That kind of setup can make a meaningful difference for parents introducing kids to collecting or for groups where not everyone is hunting the same cards.
Final Thoughts
The PGA Sports & TCG Show is shaping up to be a strong day for collectors in Palm Beach Gardens and the surrounding South Florida area. If you attend, let the organizer or other attendees know you found the show on Card Show Dex, and stay tuned for more upcoming events across Florida.
Find more upcoming South Florida hobby stops on the Miami card show calendar.