Pokémon Trading Card Game: Mega Evolution Perfect Order Elite Trainer Box
New at target
$59.99
Pre-order
WARNING: choking hazard - small parts. Not for children under 3 yrs.
Eligible for registries and wish lists
About this item
Highlights
9 Pokémon TCG: Mega Evolution—Perfect Order booster packs
1 full-art foil promo card featuring Tyrunt
65 card sleeves
40 Pokémon TCG Energy cards
A player’s guide to the Mega Evolution—Perfect Order expansion
6 damage-counter dice
1 competition-legal coin-flip die
1 plastic coin
A collector’s box to hold everything, with 6 dividers to keep it organized
A code card for Pokémon Trading Card Game Live
Description
Secret Powers Awaken! The pulse of the city beats in sync with the Pokémon and people who call it home—and preserving the order of it all is Mega Zygarde ex, the Legendary Pokémon who embodies strength in numbers! With threatening forces held at bay, peaceful days are ahead for the city’s residents, including Pokémon like Mega Clefable ex, Mega Starmie ex, and Meowth ex, in the Pokémon TCG: Mega Evolution—Perfect Order expansion!
If the item details aren’t accurate or complete, we want to know about it.
Shipping details
Estimated ship dimensions: 6.8 inches length x 7.4 inches width x 3.4 inches height
Estimated ship weight: 1.5 pounds
We regret that this item cannot be shipped to PO Boxes.
This item cannot be shipped to the following locations: American Samoa (see also separate entry under AS), Guam (see also separate entry under GU), Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico (see also separate entry under PR), United States Minor Outlying Islands, Virgin Islands, U.S., APO/FPO, Alaska, Hawaii
Return details
This item cannot be returned; please reference our return policy for more information.
A: Simply adding a bot filter thing would do the job.
submitted byKingston - 3 days ago
A: Because they want Money
submitted byCooguyfrrdddyyyy - 3 days ago
A: They never will. Lock in
submitted byMax - 3 days ago
A: They don't care because they are a for profit company. They don't care about the average consumer, only their bottom dollar. Bots still have to buy the product and that is fine with Target.
submitted byTarget Employee - 3 days ago
A: I beat them today. It was a pain, but I scored a box this afternoon. First time I’ve beat the bots.
Keep refreshing; every 1-3 minutes there are some available.
submitted byEden13Eye - 3 days ago
A: They never have.....
submitted byJesus - 3 days ago
A: These etbs are bricks that's why your manually copping
submitted byBrickheat - 3 days ago
A: ima get mad as a kid that just started collecting again i an just sad
submitted byGman - 3 days ago
Q: Diddy’s our only lord and savior
submitted by DIDDY - 3 days ago
Q: Why father? Why have they failed us?
submitted by Chaos - 3 days ago
Q: Genuinely doin absolutely nothing about the bots bro what are we doing
submitted by Aiden - 3 days ago
Q: How complex is it to implement an anti-bot mechanism similar to what other e-commerce platforms use? A CAPTCHA-based would help out the customers a lot.
submitted by Kingston - 3 days ago
A: The current implementation appears heavily optimized for throughput rather than integrity, and as a result, automated purchasing networks are consistently clearing inventory before legitimate users can complete checkout. From an architectural standpoint, there are multiple layered mitigations that could materially reduce bot success rates without degrading normal user experience. These include strict per-SKU purchase limits enforced across normalized entities (account, payment token, shipping address hash, device fingerprint), mandatory pre-queue authentication with verified payment methods, and cryptographically signed, device-bound queue tokens that invalidate on IP or fingerprint change.
At the network layer, stronger ASN reputation filtering, residential proxy heuristics, request velocity throttling, and anomaly detection based on inter-request timing entropy would meaningfully disrupt high-scale automation. At the application layer, behavioral scoring models (mouse movement entropy, scroll variance, event timing jitter, DOM interaction sequencing) combined with progressive friction (selective CAPTCHA, step-up verification triggered only on elevated risk scores) would significantly increase automation cost without harming legitimate buyers. Inventory release strategies could also be improved by implementing randomized allocation windows or lottery-based draws rather than purely speed-based checkout, as well as staggered inventory waves to prevent single-event clearing.
Individually, these controls are bypassable. In combination, they create meaningful economic friction against bot networks operating at scale. At present, the system appears vulnerable to distributed automation leveraging proxy rotation and account cycling. I strongly urge you to escalate this to your fraud prevention, e-commerce security, and infrastructure teams to reassess the balance between sell-through velocity and marketplace integrity. Without layered anti-automation controls, legitimate customers will continue to be systematically disadvantaged.
submitted byAntiScalper - 3 days ago
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