Kai'Sa Signature Card Tops $1,465 as Riftbound Origins Prices Surge

Kai'Sa decks are running rampant at locals
The card's competitive dominance, not just rarity, explains why it commands the highest secondary market price.

In the earliest weeks of Riot's foray into physical card games, the secondary market for Riftbound Origins has already begun to reflect a timeless tension between scarcity and desire. A single signature card — Kai'Sa, Daughter of the Void — now trades for $1,465, a price shaped equally by mathematical rarity, competitive necessity, and the human impulse to possess what few others can. As with all nascent collectible markets, the current moment is both a mirror of what players value and a reminder that early valuations are written in sand.

  • Signature cards drop at one-in-thirty odds per booster box, creating an immediate and steep scarcity that the secondary market has wasted no time exploiting.
  • Kai'Sa sits at the apex of both the collector and competitive worlds simultaneously — her $1,465 price tag is driven not just by rarity but by her dominance on tournament tables right now.
  • Players who pulled high-value cards early face a genuinely consequential choice: hold a $625 Sett or a $1,465 Kai'Sa as a trophy, or liquidate and chase the next set.
  • Even non-signature staples like Time Warp at $87 and Deadbloom Predator at $96 are climbing because competitive demand is outpacing supply, not because of traditional rarity.
  • Riot has signaled more printings are coming through major retailers, meaning today's dramatic prices carry an expiration date — but no one knows exactly when the correction arrives.

Riot's League of Legends trading card game, Riftbound Origins, has been in players' hands for only weeks — and already the secondary market is revealing what collectors truly value. A single Kai'Sa signature card now trades for $1,465, a figure that doubles as both a collector's trophy and a competitive asset.

The signature cards are the engine behind these numbers. With only a one-in-thirty chance of pulling one from a sealed booster box, scarcity is baked into the math. All ten of the set's most expensive cards carry an artist's signature. Viktor, the cheapest of the group, still commands $500. Volibear goes for $540. Cards in the middle of the list — Sett, Jinx, Leona, Miss Fortune, Teemo, Lee Sin — cluster between $600 and $790. Ahri sits at $1,290 before Kai'Sa claims the top spot.

Price here isn't purely aesthetic. Kai'Sa decks are winning local tournaments, and competitive demand is amplifying collector demand in a feedback loop that pushes the number higher. Ahri appears twice in the top rankings — once as a $1,290 signature and again as a $199 non-signature alternate art — illustrating how a single champion can anchor an entire market tier.

The non-signature cards tell a parallel story. Time Warp at $87 and Deadbloom Predator at $96 are expensive not because they're rare in the traditional sense, but because competitive players need them and supply hasn't caught up. A full playset of Kai'Sa in alternate art runs nearly $300.

Riot has promised additional printings through major retailers, and local shops are already taking reservations. These prices will almost certainly shift as supply grows and the meta evolves — but for now, the market has delivered its verdict clearly and expensively.

Riot's new League of Legends trading card game, Riftbound Origins, has barely been in players' hands for weeks, and already the secondary market is telling a story about what collectors truly value. A single Kai'Sa signature card—Daughter of the Void—now trades for $1,465. That's not a typo. It's the price of a used laptop, and it's what you'll pay if you want one of the rarest pulls from the set's first release.

The signature cards are the culprits behind these eye-watering numbers. These aren't just rare—they're genuinely scarce. The odds of pulling one from a sealed booster box sit at one in thirty. That mathematical reality translates directly into market value. The ten most expensive cards in Riftbound Origins all carry an artist's signature, a mark of authenticity that collectors and investors are willing to pay for. Viktor, Herald of the Arcane, the cheapest of these ten, still commands $500. Volibear, Relentless Storm goes for $540. By the time you reach the middle of the list, you're looking at cards in the $600 to $800 range—Sett, Jinx, Leona, Miss Fortune, and Teemo all occupy that territory. Lee Sin, Blind Monk sits at $790. Then comes Ahri, Nine-Tailed Fox, at $1,290, before Kai'Sa takes the crown.

What's striking is that price doesn't always correlate with beauty alone. Yes, these are gorgeous cards—the artwork is undeniably striking. But Kai'Sa's position at the top reflects something else: competitive dominance. Kai'Sa decks are running rampant at local tournaments. The card is powerful, which means players want it, which means collectors want it, which means the price climbs. Ahri, similarly, appears twice in the top rankings—once as a signature card at $1,290, and again as a non-signature alternate art version at $199. The pattern repeats throughout the market: Kai'Sa dominates both lists, appearing as a signature card and as multiple non-signature variants, each commanding serious money.

For players who pulled these cards early, the decision is real. Do you keep a $1,465 card in your collection, or do you sell it and reinvest in booster packs for the next set? One player mentioned pulling Sett, The Boss for $625 and genuinely wrestling with the choice. That's not abstract—that's actual money sitting in a sleeve.

The non-signature cards tell their own story about the meta. Time Warp, at $87, shows up in high-end Kai'Sa decks as a late-game swing card that essentially grants an extra turn. Deadbloom Predator, at $96, is a staple in Master Yi decks. These aren't expensive because they're rare in the traditional sense—they're expensive because competitive players need them, and supply hasn't caught up to demand. Kai'Sa, Survivor in alternate art costs $90 per copy, and serious players run three of them, meaning a full playset runs nearly $300.

It's still early. Riot has promised more printings of Riftbound Origins, and the company is working to restock through major retailers like Amazon, Walmart, and Best Buy. Local card shops are taking reservations. These prices, dramatic as they are right now, will almost certainly shift as supply increases and the meta evolves. But for now, in November 2025, the market has spoken: Kai'Sa is king, and collectors are paying accordingly.

Kai'Sa decks are running rampant at locals
— Dot Esports reporting on competitive meta
It's still early days for the TCG, so these prices are likely to fluctuate over the next several weeks and months
— Dot Esports analysis
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why is a single card worth more than a thousand dollars? Is it just rarity?

Model

Rarity is part of it—you've got a one-in-thirty chance of pulling a signature card from a booster box. But Kai'Sa is expensive for two reasons. It's rare, yes, but it's also one of the best cards in the game right now. Competitive players need it.

Inventor

So if Kai'Sa falls out of favor in the meta, does the price collapse?

Model

Almost certainly. These are still early days for the TCG. The meta will shift, new cards will come out, and what's dominant now might be obsolete in six months. That's why some players are selling their pulls immediately rather than holding.

Inventor

What about someone who just wants to play the game casually? Can they build a decent deck without spending thousands?

Model

Absolutely. The signature cards are collector's items and competitive staples. A casual player can build fun, functional decks with much cheaper cards. The expensive stuff is for people chasing tournament wins or completionist collections.

Inventor

Why are Kai'Sa and Ahri everywhere on these lists?

Model

Kai'Sa because she's genuinely powerful in multiple deck archetypes. Ahri because she's iconic in League lore and the artwork is stunning. Both appeal to collectors and competitive players simultaneously.

Inventor

If Riot prints more of these cards, won't that tank the value?

Model

Yes, probably. That's the risk anyone buying at these prices is taking. But Riot controls the supply, so they have incentive to keep signature cards scarce enough to maintain value. It's a balancing act.

Inventor

What would you do if you pulled a Kai'Sa signature?

Model

Honestly? I'd probably sell it. That's real money. You could reinvest it in future sets or just take the win. Holding onto it is betting that the price stays high or climbs further, and that's a gamble.

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