The Grail Kingdom Card & Collectibles Show is a one-day Melbourne, Florida event built for collectors who want a broad buy-sell-trade floor instead of a single-category show. The organizer's materials highlight sports cards, Pokémon, other TCGs, comics, toys, anime collectibles, games, and more, giving the day a wide collector-market feel.
Hosted at the Eau Gallie Civic Center, the show sits in a familiar Melbourne community venue with space for special events, receptions, and indoor activities. For collectors across the Space Coast, Brevard County, Orlando, and Central Florida, Grail Kingdom Card & Collectibles Show gives the region a Sunday destination for browsing tables, comparing inventory, and spending time around the hobby in person.
A Full Day of Cards & Collectibles
Collectors can expect a show floor centered on buying, selling, and trading, with over 100 tables promoted in the event materials. That table count matters because a mixed collectibles show becomes more useful when there is enough room for different kinds of sellers: showcases with slabs, binders of raw singles, sealed product, bargain boxes, comics, toys, and collectible displays that reward slower browsing.
The confirmed category mix is broad. Sports cards are part of the draw, so collectors can look for modern rookies, team lots, inserts, graded cards, vintage pieces, and local-market finds depending on what vendors bring. Pokémon is also specifically featured, which should appeal to families, TCG players, set builders, and collectors looking for singles, sealed product, or display-worthy cards. The flyer and organizer notes also point to TCGs more generally, with One Piece, MTG, anime collectibles, and games named in the ticket copy.
That variety makes Grail Kingdom Card & Collectibles Show useful for groups with different interests. One person can work through Pokémon binders while another checks sports cards cases, comics, Funko-style collectibles, toys, or sealed TCG boxes. Shows with a wider mix can also create better trade opportunities, because collectors are not limited to one lane of the hobby when they walk the room.
The in-person format is still the biggest advantage. Online photos can hide edge wear, surface marks, centering issues, or print defects that are easier to spot under real light. At a table show, collectors can compare copies side by side, ask vendors about pricing, talk through trades, and make faster decisions with the card or collectible in hand.
More Than Just a Card Show
The event branding leans into the "Find Your Grail" theme, but the useful attendee details are straightforward: a full-day floor, mixed categories, paid general admission, a VIP option, and free entry for kids 10 and under. That combination should make the show accessible for families while still giving serious collectors a reason to arrive ready to hunt.
VIP admission is promoted as an upgraded experience with early admission, a free guest pass, and 3 bonus tickets into the Kingdom Giveaway. VIP entry is listed before the general admission window, giving upgraded attendees a first look at the room before the main show floor opens. Giveaway prizes are also promoted as being drawn throughout the show, which gives attendees another reason to stay engaged while they browse.
Vendor information is also a major part of the event materials. The flyer promotes limited vendor spots and several table options, while the attendee-facing notes emphasize over 100 tables packed with inventory. Vendor pricing belongs outside the public admission field, but it helps explain the scale: this is being positioned as a room with enough sellers to support a full day of browsing, not just a quick stop.
A Show for All Levels of Collectors
New collectors can use Grail Kingdom Card & Collectibles Show as a hands-on way to learn what different parts of the hobby look like. Seeing raw cards, slabs, sealed boxes, binders, comics, toys, and mixed collectibles in the same room helps beginners understand condition, pricing, display value, and collecting styles faster than scrolling through listings.
Casual collectors should find the format easy to enjoy because the event is not locked into one category. A family can come for Pokémon and toys, a sports collector can focus on showcases and bargain boxes, and a TCG player can look for One Piece, MTG, or other TCG inventory depending on the vendor lineup. Kids 10 and under being free also makes the show more practical for parents bringing younger collectors.
More experienced collectors get the usual advantages of a table-heavy show: direct negotiation, quicker condition checks, and the chance to see cards or collectibles that may never be listed online. The best finds at local shows are often not the most obvious display pieces. They can be a clean raw card in a binder, a fairly priced slab, a sealed item sitting behind a case, or a trade conversation that only happens because two collectors are standing at the same table.
Final Thoughts
The Grail Kingdom Card & Collectibles Show is shaping up to be a great day for collectors in Melbourne and the surrounding 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.
For more Central Florida dates, browse the Orlando card show calendar.