Yes, Scilex Holding Co is a real company. It’s a biopharmaceutical firm specializing in acquiring, developing, and commercializing non-opioid pain management products for acute and chronic pain. Key details include:
• Headquarters: 960 San Antonio Road, Palo Alto, CA 94303, USA.
• Founded/Listed: Publicly traded on Nasdaq under the ticker SCLX since November 11, 2022.
• Products: Their commercial product is ZTlido (lidocaine topical system) for postherpetic neuralgia. They’re also advancing candidates like SEMDEXA (SP-102), a triple-strength ZTlido (SP-103), and SP-104 (low-dose naltrexone).
• Employees: Approximately 31.
• Website: scilexholding.com.
This information is based on current financial market data as of November 2025.
History is [full ](https://www.businessinsider.com/collectible-crazes-that-were-a-waste-of-money-2012-5)of collectable markets that ultimately crashed. The [near riots](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sajK38bspG4) over Pokemon card drops feels very toppy.
I've been uncomfortable that gold eagles grew to 25% of net worth, and they're far more liquid than collectable cards. Diversify assets while you can.
I spent 20€ to buy sticker capsules in 2015 for .25 a piece. They're now worth like 80 a pop and i have them all.
I also used to be a csgo better in csgolounge, i made like 20k (would be worth hundreds of thousands today) by selling skins.
How’s the liquidity on that stuff? Like, say you wanted to sell everything in a reasonable amount of time (6 months for example) and assuming prices stay stationary for those 6 months, how much can you reasonably expect to net?