In beta · macOS launch October 2026

Set building, master sets, and rainbow chases.

Import a master checklist from Beckett, TCDB, or Cardboard Connection and Card Curator lays out every base, insert, parallel, and short print with live progress bars, cost-to-complete summaries, and a rainbow chase view that shows every color of a card side-by-side.

Card Curator — Set building, master sets, and rainbow chases

How set tracking works.

Import a checklist, hook it to your collection, and let Card Curator do the math. Every card you scan or add automatically marks itself off the matching set.

1

Import a checklist

Drag a Beckett, TCDB, or Cardboard Connection CSV onto Card Curator. AI header mapping figures out which columns are card number, player, parallel name, and so on.

2

Auto-match your collection

Cards already in your collection are matched against the checklist on import. New cards you add later auto-tick the checklist as they come in.

3

Track progress, hunt parallels

Progress bars for base, inserts, parallels, and SSPs. The Rainbow Chase view shows every color of a base card side-by-side so you see at a glance what's missing.

4

Cost-to-complete advisor

Sums the live market value of every missing card. Tells you what completing the set would realistically cost today, then lets you push missing cards to your wishlist.

Built on SwiftData with AI-assisted import.

Set definitions, parallels, and progress relationships are SwiftData models. Checklist import uses optional Claude API integration to map heterogeneous CSV headers from Beckett, TCDB, and Cardboard Connection into Card Curator's data model.

  • SwiftData — set definitions, parallel relationships, progress
  • Claude API (optional) — AI CSV header mapping on import
  • SwiftUI — rainbow chase strip, grid checklist view
  • CloudKit — private sync of your sets across Macs
  • Live pricing — cost-to-complete uses your eBay/CardHedge feed
  • Wishlist bridge — push missing cards into a watch list

Frequently asked.

Where do checklists come from?

You import them. Card Curator accepts checklist data from Beckett, TCDB, and Cardboard Connection in CSV form. We do not bundle copyrighted set lists, but the importer is designed around the formats serious checklists ship in.

What is a rainbow chase?

A rainbow is the full set of parallel versions of a single base card. The Rainbow Chase view shows all known parallels of a card side-by-side with checkmarks for the ones you own, so you can see at a glance which colors are missing.

Does it tell me how much it costs to finish a set?

Yes. The cost-to-complete advisor sums the live market value of every missing card in the set, so you know what completing it would realistically cost today. See live market values →

Can I track master sets including inserts and parallels?

Yes. Set definitions include base, inserts, parallels, short prints, and any grouping you define. Master-set progress is a sum across all groupings.

What about variations and SSPs?

Variations and SSPs (super short prints) are first-class — you mark which version of a base card you own, and the progress bar tracks both the base set and the SSP set independently.

Can I push missing cards to my want list?

Yes. From the set view, one click sends every missing card to your wishlist with a price alert set to the current market value. See wishlist →

One price. Every feature. Forever.

Card Curator launches publicly in October 2026 at $59.99 USD — one-time purchase, perpetual license. Unlimited sets, unlimited checklists.

Get notified at launch