Card shop in Arlington, TX

Lone Star Comics

★ 4.1 · 81 reviews Verified

Address

1800 Timberlake Dr, Arlington, TX 76010, USA

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Hours

MonClosed
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What to expect at Lone Star Comics

Lone Star Comics holds a 4.1★ rating across 81 reviews — a reasonable baseline for a neighborhood LGS. Most visitors find what they came for, and the shop supports the everyday-player crowd without trying to be everything to everyone.

Primary game coverage at this shop is MTG and Pokémon TCG. Both receive regular booster restocking, singles inventory, and sanctioned event support — the core services that separate a dedicated LGS from a casual retailer.

Games at this shop

Below are the trading card games we've identified as supported at this shop, each with context about how that game plays and what to look for when you visit.

Magic: The Gathering (MTG)

Magic: The Gathering, launched by Wizards of the Coast in 1993, invented the trading card game genre and remains the deepest competitive card game in the world. Every week, hundreds of thousands of players meet at local stores for Friday Night Magic, prerelease tournaments, Commander nights, and draft leagues. The game cycles through Standard-legal sets four times a year, while eternal formats like Modern, Legacy, Vintage, Pauper, and Commander sustain deep metagame conversations across decades of card design.

At Lone Star Comics, Magic players can browse singles by set, crack sealed product, or join a sanctioned tournament that feeds into the WotC competitive ladder.

Magic rewards deep deckbuilding, tight play-pattern memory, and metagame adaptation — more strategy chess than luck.

Event support here: Friday Night Magic (FNM) events.

What to look for in this shop if you play MTG:

  • Ask the store what the recent Commander meta looks like — every shop has its local deck trends.
  • Check if they stock foil bulk — often the fastest way to pick up playable cards at a discount.
  • See if they run prize-support draft leagues; those beat home drafts on value.

Pokémon Trading Card Game (Pokémon TCG)

Pokémon Trading Card Game, launched in 1996 by The Pokémon Company, is the most widely-recognized TCG brand on Earth. Local game stores host weekly Pokémon League play — casual games with play-for-fun prizes and a Junior-division-friendly atmosphere. Prerelease tournaments arrive a week before every new expansion. The competitive circuit runs League Challenges, League Cups, Regional Championships, and culminates in the Pokémon World Championships each summer.

Pokémon League at Lone Star Comics runs weekly — a two-hour window to play a few games, meet other trainers, and pick up promo cards and League prizes.

Pokémon plays faster than Magic — games typically finish in 10-20 minutes, making it the friendliest entry point for kids and casual players.

Event support here: Regional Championship qualifier events.

What to look for in this shop if you play Pokémon TCG:

  • Pokémon League earns you free promo cards just for showing up — always worth the visit.
  • Singles prices vary wildly between stores; compare before buying staples.
  • If you have kids, ask about Junior-division separate tables during prereleases.

Local context

With 81 public reviews, Lone Star Comics is the kind of shop that survives on its locals. Expect fewer strangers, more first-name staff interactions, and a slower pace than tournament-heavy venues.

At 1800 Timberlake Dr, the shop operates as a standalone independent — character-full spaces where the staff's taste shows through the inventory curation.

Standard retail hours apply. Weekend afternoons are typically the busiest window; weekday mornings offer quieter browsing if you're hunting a specific card.

Focused coverage on MTG, Pokémon TCG suggests Lone Star Comics has chosen depth over breadth. Specialist shops often stock harder-to-find singles for their chosen games and support competitive-level events rather than casual-only leagues.

First-time visit tip: browse singles first, ask staff about the most recent event turnout, and you'll have a sense within twenty minutes of whether the shop fits your play style.

Frequently asked questions

Current hours are: . Hours may change on holidays or around major TCG release weekends. We recommend calling ahead for same-day visits.

You can reach the shop by phone at (817) 860-7827. For questions about event schedules, inventory availability, or grading services, a quick call usually gets the most accurate answer.

Yes — their website is http://www.mycomicshop.com/. Most shop websites publish an event calendar, singles inventory search, and buylist rates. Check their site before visiting to confirm details.

Yes — Magic: The Gathering is one of the TCGs supported at this shop. You can expect sealed product (booster boxes, elite trainer boxes, starter decks), singles for deck-building, and typically event nights dedicated to MTG. Call ahead to confirm current inventory.

Yes — Pokémon Trading Card Game is one of the TCGs supported at this shop. You can expect sealed product (booster boxes, elite trainer boxes, starter decks), singles for deck-building, and typically event nights dedicated to Pokémon TCG. Call ahead to confirm current inventory.

Selling through a local shop usually requires an appraisal appointment. Lone Star Comics likely accepts both cash payouts and store-credit offers, with credit weighted higher. Large collections warrant a scheduled visit; bulk commons are typically weight-priced per pound.

Some local shops partner with PSA, CGC, or BGS to bulk-submit grading on behalf of customers — the per-card fee is often lower than individual submissions. Confirm with Lone Star Comics directly whether they currently accept grading intake.

Dedicated LGS venues keep play tables for sanctioned tournaments (FNM, Pokémon League, Yu-Gi-Oh OTS, Commander nights) plus open drop-in play. Table availability peaks on evenings and weekends.

Card shops are generally welcoming to players of all ages. Pokémon League sessions specifically target younger players, and prerelease weekends often include Junior-division brackets.

Check the shop's location on the map above for parking context. Arlington tends to offer free lot parking in outer neighborhoods and metered/paid parking closer to the center.

Nearby card shops in Texas

Data about this shop is aggregated from public sources (Google Places, Wizards Play Network, Pokémon Play!, and our own verification). Hours, inventory, and event schedules can change; we recommend calling ahead before traveling. Shop owners: claim this listing to update information.