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SkyBox International/Fleer: No OverPower: 1995: Fleer: No Perry Rhodan Sammelkartenspiel [168] 1996: Fanpro/Between the Stars: No Pez Card Game: 2000: U.S. Games Systems: No Pirates of the Caribbean Trading Card Game [169] 2006: Upper Deck: No Pk cards [170] 2008: PKXL Cards, Inc. No Pokémon Trading Card Game [171] 1996: Wizards of the Coast ...
At the time, set the record for most expensive football card. Holds record for a Patrick Mahomes card. 27 $799,500 $799,500 Kevin Durant: 2007–08 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection Rookie Card Parallel #94 Patch Autographs Serial numbered #23/35 BGS MT 9/10 March 6, 2021 Goldin Auctions Set record for a Kevin Durant card. 28 $780,000 $780,000 ...
Fleer also released American football (1960) and basketball (1986) card sets through its history. The company also produced some non-sports trading cards. In 1995, Fleer merged with the trading card company SkyBox International and, over
SkyBox produced many licensed non-sports trading cards, including sets for Disney (1995), [11] Star Trek (since 1993) and Marvel Comics (2010). [12] SkyBox also produced SkyCaps, its milk caps games brand. [4] Cap series included DC Comics characters, Jurassic Park, Batman: Knightfall, and a National Football League series. [4]
Fleer entered to the market in 1960, producing football cards of American Football League, [7] then switching to NFL until Philadelphia Gum secured the rights for football cards in 1964. [6] In 1962, a cereal manufacturer, Post Cereal, released its first football cards set, which could be ordered directly from the company or available from ...
The following is a list of non-sports trading cards collections released among hundreds of card sets. The list includes different types that are or have been available, including animals , comics , television series , motor vehicles and movies , among others:
The short printed cards did not have a significant effect on the cards values. [24] Also new to 1988 is a 336-card set called "Baseball's Best" and 27-card "Team Books" of the A's, Cubs, Mets, Red Sox and Yankees. "Baseball's Best" was issued late in the season and sold in big-box stores as a complete factory set.
James Beckett was a statistics professor before launching Beckett Media. [3] In the 1970s, Beckett introduced some of the initial price guides for the baseball card industry, providing more detailed information on specific card prices compared to the newsletters that collectors were accustomed to. [4]