Roman Reigns Cards: Collect the Tribal Chief of WWE
A 1,300-plus day Universal Championship reign made Roman Reigns the biggest name in modern wrestling — and his cards lead the market.
From the Community
Related posts from the Wrestling Cards community on Mantel
Join the Roman Reigns Cards Community
Share your collection, compare comps, browse live marketplace listings, track trends, and connect with collectors who care about the hobby and the market behind every card.
SLAM Scores & Marketplace
SLAM is a liquidity score from 0–100 that measures how easily a card can be bought or sold at a fair price. It combines recent sales data, trading volume, and market depth into a single number. Listings are aggregated from eBay and Fanatics Collect.
90–100 Cash
70–89 Liquid
40–69 Inventory
0–39 Collection

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Roman Reigns - 2013 Topps WWE Wrestling
Avg Sale
$192
Sales
5
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Roman Reigns - 2022 Panini Prizm WWE Wrestling
Avg Sale
$1688
Sales
2
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Roman Reigns - 2021 Topps Finest WWE Wrestling
Avg Sale
$21
Sales
1
Grade
PSA 9
View in app →
Why Reigns Cards Are Worth Collecting
If you are new to wrestling card collecting, here is something you might not know: wrestling cards are produced by Topps and Panini, the same companies behind baseball and football cards, and they follow the same parallel and autograph structures. Roman Reigns is one of the best places to start because his cards are widely available across multiple product lines and price points.
When Reigns embraced the Tribal Chief persona and held the Universal Championship for over 1,300 consecutive days, something rare happened: a modern performer generated the kind of sustained collector interest that the hobby typically reserves for retired legends. That run elevated him from a polarizing main eventer to the most compelling character in professional wrestling. His WrestleMania main events, Hollywood appearances, and cultural presence make his cards some of the most sought-after in wrestling collecting.
Reigns cards appeal to two overlapping groups. Modern WWE fans who witnessed the Tribal Chief era in real time are building collections around his championship run. And Shield-era collectors who recognized his potential early now hold foundational cards from 2013-2014 that carry significant premiums as his primary rookies. That combination of current relevance and historical depth makes Reigns one of the most complete collecting targets in wrestling.
The Cards Worth Knowing
2013-14 Topps WWE Chrome (Shield Era) — Reigns's earliest Topps appearances from his Shield days function as his rookie cards. These carry meaningful premiums because they mark the beginning of a career that became one of the most dominant in WWE history. Refractor parallels from this era are especially sought after.
Panini Prizm WWE Silver Parallels — If you collect basketball or football Prizm, you already know this product line. Prizm silver and color parallels are among the most actively traded cards in the wrestling market. They grade cleanly, display well in slabs, and offer a familiar modern aesthetic that makes them a natural entry point for collectors crossing over from other sports.
Topps WWE Undisputed On-Card Autographs — On-card autograph inserts from the Undisputed line represent the high-end of the Reigns market. Low-numbered versions carry the biggest premiums and have shown the most durability through market corrections.
What Drives Demand
Watch for WrestleMania main events, returns from hiatus, and major storyline turns — those are the moments that move prices, and buying ahead of them is how experienced collectors find value. The Tribal Chief character transformation created a base price that has held through multiple market cycles. Any crossover into film, television, or a marquee feud with a returning legend generates a short-term surge that often sets a new baseline.
Here is what makes timing interesting: Shield-era Topps Chrome products from 2013-2014 have fixed populations that shrink as copies get absorbed into long-term collections. Low-numbered parallels and autograph cards have shown the most durability, while base cards remain accessible entry points during quieter periods between pay-per-view events — a great place to start if you are building your first wrestling card collection.
Find Every Listing on Mantel
The Tribal Chief era created one of the tightest collector communities in wrestling — a group that tracks every Bloodline storyline twist, every Jimmy Uso betrayal, and every Acknowledge Me moment because they know those narrative beats move prices in real time. The community on Mantel is where that knowledge concentrates, with collectors breaking down how a WrestleMania return or a new Bloodline chapter reshapes demand for Shield-era rookies and Undisputed autographs alike. They share which numbered parallels are being quietly absorbed into permanent collections and flag when storyline developments are about to create a buying window. Real-time listings from eBay and Fanatics Collect flow into one searchable feed so you can act on those insights immediately. SLAM scores measure actual sales velocity, price trends, and trading activity to show whether post-pay-per-view demand is genuine or fleeting. Comps reveal what Reigns cards are actually selling for rather than inflated asking prices, and Wish List alerts notify you when a target card hits your price.
Reigns sits at the center of the modern wrestling card market, and whether you are just getting started or adding to a growing collection, this is one of the best names to follow. Explore by browsing live listings, checking SLAM scores and comps, and joining a community that tracks the Tribal Chief's impact on the hobby in real time.
Join the Roman Reigns Cards Community
Share your collection, compare comps, browse live marketplace listings, track trends, and connect with collectors who care about the hobby and the market behind every card.
Guides & Resources
What Is a SLAM Score? →
Learn how SLAM scores rate card market activity from 0-100 and what the four score tiers mean.
How to Start Collecting Sports Cards →
A complete guide to card types, grading, buying, selling, and building your collection.
What Do Card Grades Mean? →
Learn what PSA 10, BGS 9.5, and other grades actually mean for card value and condition.
What's the Difference Between PSA, Beckett, SGC, CGC? →
Compare the major grading services and understand which one is right for your cards.
How to Get a Card Graded →
Step-by-step guide to submitting your cards for professional grading.
How to Get Cards Graded at the Show →
Tips for on-site grading submissions at card shows and conventions.
How to Protect Your Cards →
Best practices for sleeves, toploaders, and long-term card storage.
10 Tips for Navigating a Card Show →
Make the most of your next card show with these practical tips.
Sports Card Collectors Glossary of Terms →
From "hit" to "RPA" — a complete glossary of the hobby's most common terms.
Explore More Categories
Related
Wrestling Autograph CardsSports
Baseball CardsFootball CardsBasketball CardsHockey CardsSoccer CardsWrestling CardsGolf CardsMMA CardsRacing CardsTennis CardsOlympics Cards
