Big Apple Collects vs Video Database
Side-by-side comparison to help you choose the right AI tool.
Big Apple Collects
Your go-to hub for scoring sports card prices, checklists, and eBay sales hacks, all for free.
Last updated: April 4, 2026
Video Database
Monitors and organizes high-value creator videos.
Visual Comparison
Big Apple Collects

Video Database

Overview
About Big Apple Collects
Alright, listen up, card fiends and eBay hustlers. Big Apple Collects is your new digital bestie, a totally free toolkit that's basically the Swiss Army knife for anyone deep in the sports card game. Think of it as your backstage pass to the market, no velvet rope, no cover charge. Whether you're a seasoned vet with binders full of heat or a newbie just trying to figure out if that old card in your closet is a grail or garbage, this is your one-stop shop. It pulls live eBay data so you can price-check any baseball, football, or basketball card in real-time, cutting through the guesswork and hype. But it's not just a price guide, my dude. It's a massive, searchable vault with over 600 official checklists from the big dogs like Topps, Panini, and Bowman, so you can finally complete that set or hunt down that one specific parallel. And for the sellers? Oh, it gets better. It'll AI-generate those perfectly crispy 80-character eBay titles that get clicks, and create pro-level listing images like front/back combos and slick binder grids. All of this, zero subscriptions, zero paywalls. It's the ultimate power-up for your collection, period.
About Video Database
The Video Database began as an internal solution to a common frustration: as creators and content strategists we need to "study the best," but this typically means endless scrolling through social platforms riding the algo waves - good or bad. Nobody needs more of that.
Cut30, our short-form video bootcamp, maintains hundreds of hand-curated reference videos throughout its curriculum—valuable examples embedded within tutorials, exercises, and lessons. However, these references were scattered across the platform without centralized organization or analysis. What started as simply organizing and categorizing those videos, was a slippery slope.