Top Selling Magic: The Gathering Cards on TCGplayer: November 2025

The first step to serving customer demand is to understand it. So to help you follow what’s currently popular with players and collectors, we’ve put together a pair of downloadable CSV reports of the top-selling Magic: The Gathering cards of the past month.

These reports show the name and set of the Magic cards with the highest total number of copies sold on the TCGplayer Marketplace between November 1 and 30, 2025. The reports consider cards from different sets to be distinct (even if they have the same name), but do not distinguish copies sold by condition (Near Mint, Lightly Played, etc.) or by printing (Foil, etc.).

The two reports cover cards that had an average sale price in November within two ranges: $50.00 or more, and $1.00 to $49.99.

Here are five highlights from each report.

Top Selling Magic Cards: $50 or More

#1 Badgermole Cub
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $54.58

Badgermole’s mountain-sized popularity made it one of this month’s biggest gainers in Magic, as well as the bestselling Magic card over $50 in November.

It all comes down to the card’s power. With no additional support, Badgermole Cub puts 3/3 worth of stats into play and accelerates you one mana—not bad at all. But with any kind of mana dorks (like Llanowar Elves) or lands that sacrifice themselves (like fetch lands), the cub quickly builds an overwhelming mana advantage. It even stacks with itself!

We’ve seen Badgermole Cub burrow its way into Standard, Modern, Commander, and even Legacy. You should expect it to keep popping up in any format where it’s legal for the foreseeable future.

#2 Urza’s Saga
Set: Secret Lair Countdown Kit
Average Sale Price: $55.78

The Secret Lair Countdown Kit, advertised as “An Encyclopedia of Magic,” sold out almost immediately in early November, leaving interested fans with no options outside of the secondary market. Of the 26 cards in the kit, only Urza’s Saga qualified for this month’s $50+ bracket, due to this being one of only a handful of reprints the card has seen since it first released in Modern Horizons 2.

#3 The Soul Stone
Set: Marvel's Spider-Man
Average Sale Price: $59.36

In Commander, The Soul Stone is an efficient, indestructible mana rock that offers recurring value once you harness it—a no-brainer for almost any black deck.

The other Infinity Stones are expected to make their cardboard debuts in later Marvel sets like Marvel Super Heroes, likely along with some payoff for assembling them all, so any players with the means to do so are picking up their copies of The Soul Stone now while it’s relatively inexpensive.

#4 Wan Shi Tong, Librarian (Borderless)
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $96.02

Wan Shi Tong, Librarian almost gives Badgermole Cub a run for its money as the top mythic in Avatar: The Last Airbender. The jealous owl spirit naturally scales in power according to the format—the more searching there is, the better it gets—so players have been eager to test it out in Standard, Modern, and even Vintage.

#5 Badgermole Cub (Borderless)
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $82.64

Not to be left out, the borderless version of Badgermole Cub has sold well for the same reason as its base version: pure power. Note that the premium for the borderless version isn’t especially high (compared to say, the normal and borderless versions of Fire Lord Azula) since players are after whichever version they can get.

Top Selling Magic Cards: $1.00 to $49.99

#1 Sol Ring
Set: Commander: Tarkir: Dragonstorm
Average Sale Price: $1.05

Sol Ring always ranks among the bestselling cards in Magic, thanks to being a symbol of the game’s most popular format, but those sales are usually spread out among its many (many) reprints. This version of Sol Ring had one of the lowest Market Prices in November, which helped it show up in more players’ carts when they used Cart Optimizer.

#2 Firebender Ascension
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $1.38

Firebender Ascension might be too slow for competitive formats—except perhaps Standard—but any card with the word “double” on it is bound to find an audience among Commander players. Ascension pairs perfectly with all the popular firebending commanders in Avatar: The Last Airbender, like Fire Lord Azula, and it also slots neatly into popular Commander decks with lots of attack triggers like Isshin, Two Heavens as One and Arabella, Abandoned Doll.

#3 Avatar's Wrath
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $2.73

Avatar’s Wrath works as a nice one-sided board wipe in Standard decks with Doc Aurlock, Grizzled Genius, and in voltron Commander decks—especially ones led by Avatar Aang, who needs to airbend in order to flip into Aang, Master of Elements.

#4 Firebending Student
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $2.22

Firebending Student hasn’t seen much competitive play yet, but it can kill on turn three in Standard with the right support. Until somebody figures out how to pull off that combo consistently, Commander players have been satisfied running Firebending Student in all their firebending decks like Fire Lord Azula for both flavor and potentially explosive turns.

#5 Great Divide Guide
Set: Avatar: The Last Airbender
Average Sale Price: $1.49

ATLA has given players their first major influx of “Allies matter” cards since Oath of the Gatewatch almost 10 years ago. Like the Slivers they resemble mechanically, Allies have been wildly popular with Commander players, and Great Divide Guide provides the mana necessary to build around this five-color creature type.

Selling cards that have high “velocity” keeps your cash flow healthy so you can take advantage of new opportunities. Check out our reports on the top-selling cards in Yu-Gi-Oh! and Pokémon, and be sure to list these cards on TCGplayer to unlock value you can reinvest in your business.