The 100 Most Expensive "Bulk" Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards Right Now - February 2026
By Peter Day •
If you judge Yu-Gi-Oh! cards just by their rarity, you might miss out on lower-rarity cards that are worth real money on the secondary market. To help you filter out the diamonds from the rough, we’ve put together a downloadable CSV report of the most expensive “bulk” Yu-Gi-Oh! cards that were printed in the past two years.
This report shows the 100 Yu-Gi-Oh! cards of rarity Super Rare or lower printed in sets released after January 1, 2024 with the highest Market Price as of February 22, 2026. This report only considers Near Mint copies. Retro Pack, Retro Pack 2, and Limited Pack World Championship 2025 were excluded. Token cards like Token: Akiza and Black Rose Dragon were also excluded—keep an eye open for them when you open mini-boxes that come with tokens.
Here are the top 10 cards from the report.
#1 Mulcharmy Fuwalos
Set: Quarter Century Stampede
Market Price: $13.93
If you’re familiar with modern Yu-Gi-Oh!, you probably don’t consider this card “bulk” no matter what rarity it comes in.
Mulcharmy Fuwalos and its sibling cards Mulcharmy Purulia and Mulcharmy Meowls are narrower reinterpretations of Maxx “C”, the brutally efficient hand trap for punishing out-of-control Special Summons. Most Yu-Gi-Oh! decks include a playset of at least one Mulcharmy somewhere in their 70, so they’re all mandatory staples for competitive players.
Before it was reprinted in Quarter Century Stampede and the Legendary 5D’s: Box Set, Mulcharmy Fuwalos cost $60 or more. If the reprints slow down, there’s a chance it could go that high again.
#2 S:P Little Knight
Set: Quarter Century Bonanza
Market Price: $9.49
Another card that stretches the definition of “bulk,” S:P Little Knight has been a competitive staple since it first released in Age of Overlord in October 2023 as a $75 card (before climbing to nearly $150). With its dead-simple Link cost and ability to banish monsters at Quick Effect speed until it’s removed, this card’s an easy inclusion in any deck that isn’t hurting for space in its Extra Deck.
Today, the card is comparatively affordable thanks to reprints like this one. But no version should ever be overlooked.
#3 WANTED: Seeker of Sinful Spoils
Set: Quarter Century Bonanza
Market Price: $5.43
As an easy searcher for Diabellstar the Black Witch, this Spell card regularly sees play in decks that are built around or splash any of the archetypes related to Sinful Spoils, including Azamina, Snake-Eye, Diabell, and Diabellstar.
#4 Succumbing-Song Morganite
Set: Rage of the Abyss
Market Price: $3.93
Only printed once in 2024’s Rage of the Abyss, Succumbing-Song Morganite sees minimal play, but has tons of potential in floodgate decks that can afford to give up their ability to activate monster effects in the hand.
#5 Triple Tactics Thrust
Set: Quarter Century Bonanza
Market Price: $3.29
Like Mulcharmy Fuwalos and S:P Little Knight, this is another competitive staple that would be even more expensive if it hadn’t been reprinted so many times. If your opponent activates a monster effect during your turn (which is extremely common in modern Yu-Gi-Oh!), Triple Tactics Thrust punishes them by setting a Normal Spell/Trap directly from your deck.
#6 Enneacraft Reverth (Super Rare)
Set: Phantom Revenge
Market Price: $3.12
Enneacraft Reverth has only been printed in Phantom Revenge, at both Rare and Super Rare.
The Enneacraft deck is extremely budget-friendly, so players who want to buy into it often opt for the higher-rarity versions of each card. With no other versions to compete for attention, Super Rare Enneacraft Reverth has built up a serious premium compared to its $0.12 Rare counterpart.
Set: Maze of Millennia
Market Price: $2.62
Konami hasn’t reprinted Ultimate Flame Swordsman since its debut in Maze of Millennia in January 2024. That’s caused it to creep up from its $1 Market Price at the start of 2026, even though it sees next to no competitive play.
The card builds on the old, iconic Flame Swordsman from the early days of Yu-Gi-Oh!’s history, so it appeals to players who want to revisit that card in 2026.
Set: 25th Anniversary Rarity Collection II
Market Price: $2.48
This card was even more valuable until its reprint as a Rare in Maze of Muertos this month. Ultimate Slayer shows up in decks that need an answer to problematic boss monsters with tons of negates. Those kinds of boss monsters aren’t going anywhere, so neither is Ultimate Slayer until something stronger comes along.
Set: Crossover Breakers
Market Price: $2.48
Node Ryzeal has also been printed at Common and Rare, but with no higher-rarity versions available than this Super Rare, it’s been able to hold a solid premium over those other versions.
#10 Tenpai Dragon Paidra
Set: Legacy of Destruction
Market Price: $2.36
This card reached $13 in May of last year, before Tenpai Dragon Paidra was reprinted for the first time in the 2025 Mega-Pack.
Tenpai Dragon hasn’t seen much success in 2026 so far. If that changes, and we don’t see another reprint, expect this card to spike again.
By knowing which cards are more valuable than their rarity would suggest, you can save time choosing which cards to list as singles. Download the “Bulk” Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards Report to review the 100 most expensive Super Rare and lower cards since 2024. Then list those cards on TCGplayer to unlock the full value of your inventory.
Download the 100 Most Expensive “Bulk” Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards Report