The Rock Cards: Collect the Most Electrifying Crossover in Sports Entertainment
From the WWE ring to the global box office, The Rock's cards draw demand from wrestling fans and pop culture collectors alike.
From the Community
Related posts from the Wrestling Cards community on Mantel
Join the The Rock 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
Dwayne Johnson - 1994 Bumble Bee Miami Hurricanes Football
Avg Sale
$7200
Sales
0
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Dwayne Johnson - 1998 Comic Images WWF Superstarz Wrestling
Avg Sale
$2314
Sales
0
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →

Collection
Buy it because you love it
Dwayne Johnson - 1998 Comic Images WWF Superstarz Wrestling
Avg Sale
$1000
Sales
0
Grade
PSA 10
View in app →
The Legacy in Cardboard
There is a moment in every collector's journey when they realize a card represents more than an athlete — it represents a cultural era. For Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, that era spans the Attitude Era's electric Monday nights, Hollywood's biggest box office runs, and a global celebrity status that no other wrestler has ever approached. A third-generation performer who became the biggest mainstream star WWE ever produced, Rock headlined WrestleMania main events, delivered some of the most memorable promos in wrestling history, and then repeated the trick in Hollywood as the highest-grossing actor of his generation. That dual-career arc creates a collector base far larger than any other wrestler can claim, pulling in both hardcore wrestling hobbyists and casual pop culture buyers.
Rock cards attract three distinct collector segments. Vintage wrestling enthusiasts chase his late-1990s releases for Attitude Era nostalgia. Modern wrestling collectors target Topps Chrome and Prizm parallels for grading and display. And crossover collectors who follow entertainment memorabilia see Rock cards as the most actively traded intersection of sports and celebrity in the hobby.
Definitive Cards in the Collection
1998 Comic Images WWF Superstarz — Widely recognized as Rock's first major card release, this is the foundational piece for any serious collection. High-grade copies carry meaningful premiums because surviving examples in clean condition are genuinely scarce for a product of this era.
Topps WWE Chrome Refractors — Chrome refractors and numbered parallels combine modern production quality with strong visual appeal. These are the most actively traded Rock cards in the hobby and the easiest to find in graded slabs.
Panini Prizm WWE Silver Parallels — Prizm brought its signature aesthetic to WWE, and Rock silver prizms have become collector favorites for their clean look and how easily they trade. Color prizm parallels in low-numbered runs are the higher-end chase pieces.
What Moves the Market
Watch for two types of moments. Any hint of a WWE in-ring return or WrestleMania appearance sends prices surging overnight — that is your window to buy before mainstream attention arrives. His Hollywood releases and cultural moments — press tours, social media virality, brand launches — keep casual demand steady year-round even when there is no wrestling news.
Autographed cards and low-numbered parallels hold value best over time because supply is fixed and demand scales with his visibility. Base cards offer accessible entry points, but the real price resilience lives in numbered runs under /99 and on-card autograph inserts, where population counts stay low and collector competition stays high.
Cross-Sport Appeal
No wrestler in history has crossed over into mainstream entertainment the way Rock has. His filmography alone generates a collector demand channel that operates independently of anything happening in wrestling — every new franchise, press tour, or cultural moment keeps him in front of billions of eyeballs worldwide. That makes his cards a rare dual-market piece: they respond to WrestleMania season and Hollywood release calendars simultaneously. Entertainment memorabilia buyers, pop culture collectors, and fans who have never watched a single wrestling match all participate in his card market, giving it a breadth and resilience that is unique in the hobby.
Track the Legacy on Mantel
Rock's collector base is unlike anyone else's in the hobby — wrestling fans who remember the Attitude Era's Monday nights, film buffs who track box office runs, and mainstream sports card collectors who see him as the ultimate crossover card. The community on Mantel bridges all three groups in one place, so Attitude Era nostalgists sharing vintage Comic Images finds are in the same feed as modern parallel chasers discussing how a WrestleMania return rumor or a new franchise announcement shifts demand. That cross-pollination of knowledge is the edge: wrestling collectors flag which inserts carry historical weight, while entertainment memorabilia buyers spot Hollywood-driven demand signals that pure wrestling hobbyists miss. Real-time listings from eBay and Fanatics Collect flow into one searchable feed so you never have to toggle between platforms. SLAM scores measure actual sales velocity, price trends, and trading activity to separate genuine buying pressure from hype. Comps reveal what Rock cards are actually selling for rather than inflated asking prices, and Wish List alerts notify you the moment a target card hits a price you are willing to pay.
Rock cards sit at the intersection of wrestling history and global pop culture. Start your collection by browsing live listings, verifying value with SLAM scores and comps, and joining the community where Attitude Era collectors and Hollywood crossover buyers share the same conversation.
Join the The Rock 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.
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