Top Selling Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards on TCGplayer: March 2025
By Peter Day •
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 Yu-Gi-Oh! cards of the past month.
These reports show the name and set of the Yu-Gi-Oh! cards with the highest total number of copies sold on the TCGplayer Marketplace between March 1 and March 31, 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 March within two ranges: $50.00 or more, and $1.00 to $49.99.
Here are five highlights from each report.
Top Selling Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards: $50 or More
#1 Seventh Tachyon
Set: Maze of the Master
Average Sale Price: $64.75
Seventh Tachyon is the most popular new card from the March 14 Yu-Gi-Oh release Maze of the Master: a flexible search spell that can add consistency to a wide variety of decks. Both in terms of power and price, this is the chase card of Maze of the Master.
#2 Primite Lordly Lode
Set: Rage of the Abyss
Average Sale Price: $58.20
In October, Rage of the Abyss introduced the Primite archetype, which is built around summoning Normal Monsters. It takes a lot of power to catch Normal Monsters up with modern Effect Monsters, but Primite cards deliver that power. Primite Lordly Lode is a key piece of the archetype which allows you to search up a Primite card and Special Summon a Normal Monster from your deck, hand, or GY.
Primite breathes new life into a host of beloved power-crept archetypes, which has made all the Primite cards extremely popular. More than that, Primite is actually competitive, whether paired with actual Normal Monster archetypes in Primite Blue-Eyes, or alongside Effect Monsters like in Primite Ryzeal. Given this popularity and competitive success, we can expect Primite cards to be in demand for a long time.
#3 Mulcharmy Fuwalos
Set: Rage of the Abyss
Average Sale Price: $61.54
Much like Mulcharmy Purulia (which preceded it), Fuwalos recalls Maxx “C” in that it lets its player draw a card for each time their opponent Special Summons, with a few new restrictions. With Maxx “C” banned, Fuwalos and Purulia’s only competition for meta dominance is each other.
#4 Dominus Impulse
Set: Rage of the Abyss
Average Sale Price: $59.44
Everyone knew Rage of the Abyss had a game-changing hand trap that would punish opponents for Special Summoning. What wasn’t obvious was that it actually had two such cards, the second of which is Dominus Impulse. While it can’t be played in Light, Earth, and Wind decks, the ability to negate a Special Summon and potentially destroy the offending card has already made Dominus Impulse more or less mandatory in any decks that handle that restriction.
#5 Sage with Eyes of Blue
Set: OTS Tournament Pack 27
Average Sale Price: $58.11
Cards tend to sell well either because they’re cheap, or because they’re expensive. This is an example of the latter (less-intuitive) case.
Sage with Eyes of Blue supports the Blue-Eyes White Dragon archetype, which roared back into the competitive scene with the release of the Blue-Eyes White Destiny Structure Deck on February 14th. The Structure Deck contains reprints of Sage, but players who want to prove they’re the real king of games prefer the more exclusive version from OTS Tournament Pack 27. These packs are the most recent prize support packs sent to Yu-Gi-Oh Official Tournament Stores, and replaced Pack 26 on February 26.
Top Selling Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards: $1.00 to $49.99
#1 Infinite Impermanence
Set: Structure Deck: Blue-Eyes White Destiny
Average Sale Price: $3.19
Infinite Impermanence has been a permanent part of competitive yugioh since 2018. So when the Blue-Eyes White Destiny Structure Deck contained a reprint of this essential card, it provided an unmissable opportunity for newer players to pick up this card for cheap, and for established players to sell off their excess copies as they bought enough decks to get a playset of Maiden of White.
#2 Anubis the Last Judge
Set: Maze of the Master
Average Sale Price: $7.67
Maze of the Master introduced new support for decks built around Egyptian-themed traps, inspired by the playstyle of Odion in the original anime. Anubis the Last Judge both enables and pays off that strategy by searching up The Man with the Mark (who we’ll get to momentarily), and by punishing opponents who mess with your Spells and Traps.
#3 Treasures of the Kings
Set: Maze of the Master
Average Sale Price: $8.99
Treasures of the King gives the same Odion-themed trap deck a constant source of card advantage by searching up one monster that mentions “Temple of the Kings” every turn. It also counts as “Temple of the Kings” itself, ensuring you can activate any conditional effects on those cards.
#4 The Man with the Mark
Set: Maze of the Master
Average Sale Price: $10.28
The Man with the Mark is more or less Odion himself, in card form. It can be searched up with Anubis the Last Judge and searches up Treasures of the Kings, all while preventing your opponent from destroying it and other on-theme cards by battle or card effects.
Time will tell whether this trap-heavy archetype can compete in 2025. Until then, expect The Man with the Mark and the other trap-related cards from Maze of the Master to be popular with fans who want to solve that puzzle for themselves.
#5 Ash Blossom & Joyous Spring
Set: Structure Deck: Blue-Eyes White Destiny
Average Sale Price: $2.27
Just like Infinite Impermanence, Ash Blossom & Joyous Spring is a competitive staple that got reprinted in the Blue-Eyes White Destiny Structure Deck, prompting a flurry of purchases as fans who wanted the deck but not the reprints sold to fans who wanted the reprints but not the deck.
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 Magic and Pokémon, and be sure to list these cards on TCGplayer to unlock value you can reinvest in your business.