Six Kollektors built this.

That is not a tagline.

Anime raised a generation of us in India. The stories, the fights, the friendships, the moments that made us who we are. The collectables are pieces of those moments. The Kollektor exists to bring those pieces home.

We source everything directly from where it first drops. Japanese releases from Japan. English releases from wherever in the world they arrive first. We do this because a collectable should carry the full weight of where it came from, not the shortcuts that got it here. Our catalogue spans seven of the most loved anime in the world: Dragon Ball, Demon Slayer, Pokémon, One Piece, Attack on Titan, Jujutsu Kaisen, Naruto, and many more to come.

What we do beyond sourcing is what makes the brand. Every piece is photographed with care. Every listing is written so you know exactly what you are getting. Every package is built to feel like an occasion. We want you to feel the love that went into it the moment you open the box.

This brand is for every kind of collector. The one who just discovered what a Charizard is worth. The one who has been chasing a Shenron piece for years. The one who is not sure where to begin. All of you belong here.

The Operator

CEO

He has been choosing what comes into his own collection for seven years. A full wall of Bandai figures, a Goku Ultra Instinct he chased for two and a half years before he found it, a Tournament of Power card set he is still working on. That experience of deciding what is worth the money, the wait, and the wall space is what he now brings to this business. Every card on the site, every price, every call on what makes the cut, runs through him first. Seven years in the sports business taught him one thing he builds around: the loud work does not make the brand, the boring work does. Quiet Goku energy most days. Puts on the Tournament of Power when a hard call has been sitting on his desk too long.

The Eye

Creative Direction

He has been building the same kind of room for five years that he is now building for The Kollektor. A Bandai figure collection of iconic Dragon Ball Z moments, Gojo Funko Pops, and lately Formula One cars, set up so carefully that people assume the collection is twice the size it actually is. That eye is why every photograph on this site, every frame of the packaging, every detail that made you stop scrolling, looks the way it does. Fashion and product photographer by trade, weekend adventure sportsperson, dog trainer by instinct. Carries the Vegeta streak through everything he touches, never done, never satisfied, always training past the last good version. Has, more than once, made us all pause a fight scene so he could explain why the lighting choice mattered.

The Signal

Marketing

He has been collecting longer than any of us, and he is the reason the rest of us started. Seven years of figures, cards, keychains, lighters, stickers, manga posters, coloured prints, two full rooms of it, across more anime titles than most Indian collectors keep up with. He reads manga years ahead of the anime, which is why he knows what characters matter before the rest of the country catches on. That foresight runs through everything he does for the brand. The social, the brand language, the reels, the ads. Came up through ed-tech, scaled his own startup before joining this one, still prefers to pull the levers himself. Plays the Itachi game, three moves ahead, nothing wasted, every piece weighed before it is picked up.

The Backbone

Inventory and Accounting

He has been opening packs, reading centring, comparing print quality, and memorising pull rates for longer than most people in India have known what TCG stands for. Pokémon is his religion. That obsession is the whole reason the inventory of this brand is what it is. Every card that reaches your hands travelled through his first. The sourcing, the authentication, the inventory flow, the accounting that holds the business together. Former professional badminton player turned finance specialist, and the CEO’s younger brother, which is its own kind of quality control. Disappears into a new topic the way Gojo disappears into a fight, and comes out knowing more about it than the rest of us combined.

The Voice

Communications and Customer Experience

He has not missed a single episode of One Piece for as long as One Piece has been alive. A collector who goes after moment cards over character cards, a distinction most people never notice but every real One Piece fan knows. Watches, Zoro figures, keychains, shoes, anything with the right scene attached. That depth of feeling for the thing is what he now brings to the person on the other end of your message. Every question about an order, every card query, every small conversation between us and a customer, that is his desk. Sports business, PR, communications, and the kind of person who treats every message like the whole brand depends on it. Reads a situation the way Zoro reads a fight, clear-eyed, direction-locked, already three steps ahead.

The Build

AI Filmmaking

He has been chasing the most sought-after Pokémon cards since before he was old enough to buy them himself, and he wants the brand to drop a proper My Hero Academia card collection one day because My Hero Academia was the anime that shaped him. That collector’s instinct for what is worth the chase runs through every visual he builds for us. Every AI image on this site, every reel that made you stop mid-scroll, every motion piece that looked too good to be machine-made, came out of his workflow. The youngest on the team, and the one we go to when a visual problem needs solving at the code level. When a prompt will not do it, he goes to GitHub, finds the skill code, builds the workflow from scratch, makes the whole thing look obvious in retrospect. Classic Midoriya blueprint, outwork the gap, quietly build the tool nobody else could.

A closing note from us.

Anime gave us more than a hobby. It gave us an outlet, a language between us, a window into Japanese food and culture and craft. It taught us what family means, what friendship means, what it looks like not to give up. Collecting started as a way to hold onto the feelings those stories gave us. Somewhere along the way, it became what we spent our money on, our time on, eventually our lives on. Some of us are already learning Japanese because we want to go deeper than tourism. We built The Kollektor for the collectors we already are, and for the ones we hope to meet through it.