the kid didn't get scammed Pokémon comes in 14 languages: English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, and Brazilian Portuguese. The text on the cards is translated to match the country of release, but the content of the cards is the same across all languages. This means that the illustrations, attacks, and effects are the same, even if the language is different. The Pokémon Company International prints English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish cards in the United States or the European Union. Portuguese cards are produced in Brazil. so just because it has a different language does not mean its fake or the kid got scammed. just means the kid does not know the language barriers or difference's
the kid didn't get scammed Pokémon comes in 14 languages:
English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, and Brazilian Portuguese.
The text on the cards is translated to match the country of release, but the content of the cards is the same across all languages. This means that the illustrations, attacks, and effects are the same, even if the language is different.
The Pokémon Company International prints English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish cards in the United States or the European Union. Portuguese cards are produced in Brazil. so just because it has a different language does not mean its fake or the kid got scammed. just means the kid does not know the language barriers or difference's
@@littlealex5709 by scammed I mean he was taken advantage of value wise. He ended up trading down thinking the value of it was Japanese
It says CS in the name of the slab... As much as I know it props up the industry I almost wish kids weren't allowed at cons for their sake and mine