The Middle East’s First
Professional Grading Service
for Collectibles & Memorabilia

MEGA card grading visual
Card grading principles

MEGA Card Grading Principles

MEGA Card Grading Principles have been developed through the combination of internationally recognized grading practices, extensive practical grading experience, and the proprietary methodology established by Middle East Grading Alliance (MEGA). Together, these principles define the philosophy, decision-making framework, and professional standards that govern every card grading process performed by MEGA.

We believe that these principles provide a clear and comprehensive representation of our card grading approach, methodology, and quality standards. They form the foundation of every grading decision and ensure professional judgment throughout the cards evaluation process.

These Grading Principles have been developed exclusively by Middle East Grading Alliance for use within the MEGA grading system. They represent the company's proprietary grading methodology, accumulated expertise, and corporate know-how, and constitute a proprietary intellectual asset of MEGA. While intended to promote transparency and understanding of the MEGA grading process, these principles remain an integral part of MEGA's corporate standards and professional methodology.
Consistency, objectivity & transparency

MEGA card grading is founded upon three fundamental principles: Consistency, Objectivity, and Transparency. Together, these principles establish the foundation for every grading decision and ensure confidence in the grading process.

Consistency

Every card submitted to MEGA is evaluated according to the same published grading standards, regardless of its owner, market value, rarity, manufacturer, or country of origin. Similar cards exhibiting comparable characteristics should receive equivalent grades whenever evaluated under the same grading standards.

Objectivity

Grading decisions are based upon measurable technical characteristics, observable condition, and established grading criteria rather than personal preference, commercial considerations, or subjective opinion. Every grade reflects the card's actual state of preservation at the time of examination.

Transparency

MEGA is committed to maintaining grading standards that are clear, understandable, and consistently applied. Collectors should be able to understand the methodology behind the assigned grade and the principles governing the evaluation process.

Technical vs. visual assessment

Every card certified by MEGA is evaluated through two complementary perspectives: Technical Assessment and Visual Assessment.

Technical Assessment

Technical Assessment consists of the objective examination of measurable physical characteristics, manufacturing features, structural preservation, and observable imperfections. This evaluation is based upon established grading criteria and measurable condition standards.

Visual Assessment

Visual Assessment considers the overall appearance and collector appeal of the card. It evaluates how the collective effect of all visible characteristics influences its presentation, balance, attractiveness, and desirability from the perspective of an experienced collector.

Balanced Evaluation

Neither Technical Assessment nor Visual Assessment alone determines the final grade. MEGA grading reflects a balanced consideration of both objective physical condition and overall visual presentation, applying informed professional judgment within the framework of published grading standards.

MEGA card grading visual
Magnification standard

Cards grading is performed primarily under normal viewing conditions within controlled lighting and supplemented by magnification not exceeding 10x scale.

Magnification is used to assist the grader in identifying imperfections relevant to the card's preservation rather than to detect microscopic manufacturing characteristics that have no meaningful influence on appearance, structural integrity, or collectability.

The purpose of magnification is to improve grading accuracy while maintaining a practical standard that reflects normal collector expectations and professional grading practices.
Principle of defect origin

Whenever reasonably possible, MEGA distinguishes between imperfections originating during the manufacturing process and those resulting from post-production handling, play, storage, transportation, environmental exposure, or other external influences.

Both categories of imperfections may influence the assigned grade; however, understanding their origin allows the grader to evaluate their significance more accurately and consistently.

Where the origin of a defect cannot be determined with reasonable confidence, the grader shall evaluate the imperfection according to its observable characteristics and overall impact on the card.

Principle of manufacturing characteristics

Manufacturing characteristics are evaluated separately from post-production imperfections whenever they can be confidently identified.

Although manufacturing characteristics may influence the final grade, they generally carry less grading significance than comparable imperfections resulting from handling, play, storage, or environmental exposure. This distinction recognizes that factory-produced characteristics do not reflect the subsequent preservation of the card.

When manufacturing and post-production imperfections produce a similar visual effect, the final grading impact is determined through informed professional judgment, considering their severity, visibility, location, and cumulative influence on the overall presentation of the card.
MEGA card grading visual
Severity hierarchy

Not all imperfections possess equal grading significance.

Every observable characteristic is evaluated according to four primary factors:

  • Severity. The physical magnitude of the imperfection, including its size, depth, extent, or structural significance.
  • Visibility. How readily the imperfection can be detected under normal viewing conditions and, where appropriate, examination using magnification not exceeding 10x scale.
  • Location. The position of the imperfection relative to important design elements or visually prominent areas of the card. Imperfections located within focal areas generally carry greater grading significance than comparable imperfections occurring in less visually important locations.
  • Cumulative Effect. Multiple minor imperfections may collectively influence the assigned grade to the same extent as a single more significant imperfection when their combined effect similarly reduces the card's overall preservation or visual presentation.
Limiting principle

Although every grading category is evaluated collectively, a single characteristic displaying imperfections consistent with a lower grading standard may limit the final sub-grade or overall grade when the severity or visibility of the defect materially affects the card's preservation or visual presentation.

Superior preservation in other grading categories cannot fully compensate for one significantly inferior characteristic.

The Limiting Principle promotes grading consistency by ensuring that major imperfections receive appropriate grading significance regardless of the otherwise excellent condition of the card.
Principle of dominant defects

Certain imperfections possess greater grading significance because of their permanence, structural impact, visibility, or influence on the card's long-term preservation.

Defects such as creases, folds, tears, trimming, severe dents, crushing, delamination, layer separation, missing material, or other major structural damage generally carry greater grading weight than minor cosmetic imperfections.

Professional judgment therefore considers not only the number of imperfections present but also their relative grading significance and influence on the card's overall preservation and visual presentation.

Preservation progression philosophy

MEGA grading evaluates cards as a progression through successive stages of preservation rather than simply as an increasing number of imperfections.

Each grading category reflects the gradual transition from original factory preservation through progressively greater evidence of handling, wear, structural deterioration, and ultimately severe condition loss.

This philosophy recognizes that cards naturally age over time and that grading should reflect the overall state of preservation rather than merely counting individual defects.

Consequently, every MEGA grading standard is structured to describe how preservation evolves throughout the grading scale, enabling consistent evaluation while remaining intuitive for both professional graders and collectors.