When a product launches and delivers, there’s a certain kind of electricity that permeates the sports card hobby. Genuine, wallet-opening, argument-starting electricity instead of the manufactured hype and pre-release breathlessness from YouTube breakers. Since Topps Chrome Football went on sale, that is precisely what has been taking place, and Jaxson Dart, a 23-year-old quarterback for the New York Giants, is at the center of it all.
A decade. For that duration, Topps was prevented from obtaining licenses for NFL cards, and collectors either tolerated Panini’s monopoly or vociferously protested about it in online forums. It seemed like a long-overdue grudge match when Fanatics finally reclaimed those rights and declared Topps’ return to football. Now that the product is at last in the hands of consumers, the discussion has moved from excitement to a more contentious one: which company produced the superior Dart card? Collectors have opinions, as they usually do.
Dart received a lot of attention during his rookie season. Twelve starts, fifteen touchdowns, five interceptions, fourteen games, and a quarterback rating that indicated someone was genuinely focused on their work. The addition of John Harbaugh as head coach during the offseason was even more consequential because it has the power to completely change the course of a young quarterback’s career. Card values react to stories, and Dart’s story is now among the league’s most captivating.
Topps made a strong first impression. Older collectors are reminded of the reasons behind their initial love for the brand by the numerous high-visibility parallels and genuinely rare inserts found in their Chrome product. With one per 116 boxes, or about one in every 2,319 packs, the Kaiju insert has emerged as the card that everyone is chasing. The visual impact is strong because it depicts Dart as an enormous, larger-than-life creature. In just a few days, three sales were recorded on Card Ladder: $6,400, $10,600, and $11,500. in a week or less. That’s collectors in full sprint, not a soft market finding its floor.

The Black Wave Refractor autograph, which was limited to ten copies, went up for auction and received 38 bids before closing at $14,000 on April 20, five days after it was first released. auto on the card. Ten print runs. Watching cardboard move like blue-chip stock is almost ridiculous, but the speed of it all is impressive. Topps is loudly taking advantage of the fact that Panini does not currently provide on-card autos for Dart’s NFL rookie cards.
However, Panini’s supporters aren’t keeping quiet. For good reason, each of the case hits—Downtown, Colorblast, Kaboom!—has a devoted fan base. During release week, Downtown Dart cards were selling for $2,000. They are currently trading at about $800, but in a PSA 10, they are rising back toward $1,700. With their comic-explosion look, Kaboom! cards are selling for about $1,800, and collectors who have been chasing those inserts for years aren’t giving up on them just because Topps came back. The pastime has a memory. Over the course of ten years of exclusivity, Panini developed genuine relationships, some of which are difficult to sever by a single product cycle.
Whether Topps’ return will permanently change the market or if this is just the thrill of novelty is still up in the air. A new product, a new coach, and a new chapter for a team that hasn’t had much to celebrate lately, Jaxson Dart seems to have arrived at the perfect time. Observing Giants supporters purchase rookie cards with a semblance of sincere optimism is a noteworthy small story in and of itself. Even the skeptics seem to be surreptitiously checking eBay. Just to check.
