2025 Topps Universe WWE Sales Figures: Hogan, Undertaker, Bliss, and a Wave of On-Card Autos
Late February 2026 produced a strong run of completed sales for 2025 Topps Universe WWE, highlighted by a 1/1 Undertaker insert, a premium Hulk Hogan autograph parallel, and several on-card autographs from current stars. The mix is important for collectors because it shows how the product is behaving across three pillars of the WWE card market: iconic legends, true one-of-ones, and modern on-card signatures with low serial numbers.
Below is a snapshot of notable sales that closed Feb 25-27, 2026. Prices listed reflect the sale amounts shown on the listings, with several marked “Best offer accepted,” meaning the true accepted price may be lower than the displayed figure.
Key Completed Sales (Feb 25-27, 2026)
- Undertaker - 2025 Topps Universe WWE Rage Undertaker RA-20 Insert 1/1: $1,000.00 (Best offer accepted), sold Feb 26, 2026
- Hulk Hogan - Auto Legends Orange Warp 15/25 (LGA-HUH): $999.99 (Best offer accepted), sold Feb 27, 2026
- Alexa Bliss - Event Worn Patch Autograph /10: $799.00 (or Best Offer), sold Feb 26, 2026
- Axiom - Masked Insert (MAS-10) Case Hit: $300.00 (Best offer accepted), sold Feb 27, 2026
- Sol Ruca - On-card auto Gold Refractor SP /50: $299.00 (or Best Offer), sold Feb 27, 2026
- Stephanie Vaquer - On-card auto (UNA-SVA): $200.00 (or Best Offer), sold Feb 26, 2026
- Randy Orton - Namesakes NMS-24 /25: $150.00 (or Best Offer), sold Feb 25, 2026
- Rhea Ripley - Mat Relic Green Electric /99 (WAU-RRI): $149.99 (or Best Offer), sold Feb 26, 2026
Undertaker Rage 1/1: A True One-of-One for a Franchise Legend
A 1/1 Undertaker is the kind of card that can set the tone for an entire week of comps, even in a set with plenty of numbered parallels and hits. The sale of the 2025 Topps Universe WWE Rage Undertaker RA-20 Insert 1/1 at $1,000 (Best offer accepted) is notable on two fronts. First, it is a true one-of-one, which still matters more than almost any other attribute in wrestling cards. Second, Undertaker remains one of the most collected names in WWE history, with demand that spans generations of fans.
From a collector standpoint, Undertaker’s card market tends to reward scarcity and character-driven design. Inserts that lean into his presentation and legacy often do well, and the “Rage” branding reads as a dramatic, display-friendly chase. Even without an autograph, a 1/1 insert of a top-tier legend can sit in the same price neighborhood as premium signed cards, because it offers the cleanest scarcity story available.
Hulk Hogan Orange Warp Auto /25: Premium Parallel, Premium Name
The Hulk Hogan Auto Legends Orange Warp 15/25 (LGA-HUH) closed at $999.99 with a best offer accepted. For Topps Universe WWE collectors, this checks multiple boxes: a signature, a low print run, and one of the most recognizable wrestlers the hobby has ever seen.
Hogan remains a central figure in pro wrestling history, synonymous with WWE’s national expansion and mainstream boom years. For collectors who prioritize historical impact, Hogan sits near the top of the legend tier alongside names like Undertaker, Stone Cold Steve Austin, The Rock, and Ric Flair. That status helps explain why his numbered autograph parallel can trade at a level comparable to a 1/1 insert of another icon.
Parallel selection matters, too. “Orange Warp” signals a visually distinct refractor-style finish that tends to photograph well and display well, which helps on the secondary market. In modern card collecting, eye appeal is not a small variable, especially for cards in the /25 range where there may be multiple color parallels and collectors are picky about the best-looking version to chase.
Alexa Bliss Patch Auto /10: Scarcity Meets Memorabilia Demand
Alexa Bliss’s event worn patch autograph /10 sold for $799 (or Best Offer). Patch autos occupy a different lane than standard autographs. Collectors are paying for a signature plus a tangible piece of memorabilia, and the best versions are the ones that clearly communicate scarcity and quality at a glance.
Bliss is one of the defining women’s division stars of her era, with a career that includes major championship moments and a sustained presence as a featured character. That combination tends to keep her demand steady even when the market cycles. In a product like 2025 Topps Universe WWE, a /10 patch auto sits in a sweet spot: low enough to feel truly limited, but not so rare that it disappears into private collections immediately.
For buyers, the key details to verify on patch autos are the clarity of the autograph, whether the patch has strong color or texture, and how the card is labeled. “Event worn” carries weight, and collectors often prefer it to generic memorabilia language. The sale suggests that high-end Bliss cards remain a premium segment within the broader women’s division market.
Axiom MAS-10 Case Hit: Character Cards Can Carry Real Value
Axiom’s 2025 Topps WWE Universe MAS-10 Masked Insert case hit sold at $300 with a best offer accepted. Case hits are their own collecting category, built around pull-rate scarcity rather than serial numbering. When a case hit also features a presentation-focused character, it can attract both set builders and character collectors.
Axiom’s identity is heavily tied to the mask and the visual branding of the character, which makes a “Masked Insert” theme feel especially direct. That matters in wrestling cards more than in many other sports, because character and presentation are part of the appeal. A clean, iconic image can push a non-autograph insert into a higher tier than collectors might expect if they are coming from traditional sports cards.
At this price level, condition and centering can be important because case hits can end up being graded more often than mid-tier parallels. Collectors tracking the Axiom market will want to watch whether this sale becomes a reference point or a short-term spike tied to low supply in the first wave of cards hitting the market.
Sol Ruca Gold Refractor Auto /50: Modern On-Card Signatures Find a Floor
Sol Ruca’s on-card auto Gold Refractor SP /50 sold for $299 (or Best Offer). On-card autographs remain a hobby preference, and Topps Universe WWE has leaned into that appeal for collectors who want signatures that feel more personal and less manufactured.
Ruca has developed a following for her athletic style and highlight-reel moments, and that kind of momentum can show up quickly in autograph demand. A /50 gold refractor is also a familiar collecting language. It is scarce enough to feel meaningful, but it is still obtainable for collectors building a focused run of autos rather than chasing only the most expensive hits.
For collectors comparing versions, the /50 tier is often where you can still get a strong card without having to pay the premium attached to /25, /10, or one-of-one parallels. This sale helps establish a real-world benchmark for a low-numbered, on-card modern autograph in the set.
Stephanie Vaquer On-Card Auto: Early Comps for a Newer Name
Stephanie Vaquer’s on-card auto (UNA-SVA) sold at $200 (or Best Offer). For collectors, these earlier sales can matter because they help establish where a wrestler’s Topps-era on-card autographs begin trading before more supply appears and before the market chooses its favorite parallels.
Vaquer has built recognition with a hard-hitting in-ring style and growing visibility, and collectors often respond quickly when a talent’s first wave of mainstream-set autographs hit the market. On-card signatures are especially important for these early comps. When collectors decide to take a chance on a rising name, they tend to prefer the version that feels the most “true” autograph card, and on-card usually wins that argument.
If more numbered versions begin surfacing, this type of base or standard auto comp becomes a reference point. It will be worth watching whether collectors chase color and serial numbering quickly, or whether the market stays anchored around clean on-card autos at accessible prices.
Randy Orton Namesakes /25: Star Power with a Set-Builder Angle
Randy Orton’s Namesakes NMS-24 /25 sold for $150 (or Best Offer). Orton is one of the most collected modern-era WWE stars, with a career that spans multiple generations and eras of programming. That longevity matters because it broadens the buyer pool: long-time fans, current viewers, and collectors who focus on Hall of Fame caliber careers.
The “Namesakes” concept also adds a set-collector element, which can support demand even when the card is not an autograph. Low numbering at /25 gives it legitimate scarcity, and Orton’s steady collector base often keeps limited parallels from falling into bargain territory.
Rhea Ripley Mat Relic /99: Affordable Entry Point for a Top Star
Rhea Ripley’s mat relic Green Electric /99 sold for $149.99 (or Best Offer). Ripley is one of WWE’s most prominent current stars, and her memorabilia cards offer a more affordable way for collectors to buy into her market without competing for top-end autographs.
Relic cards are often condition-friendly for display collectors, and /99 provides a clear serial-numbered hook. For Ripley collectors building rainbows or player collections, these mid-numbered relic parallels can become useful targets, especially when higher-end autos are scarce or priced out of reach.
What These Sales Say About 2025 Topps Universe WWE
This group of results shows a healthy spread: four-figure pricing for top legends and true one-of-ones, strong premiums for low-numbered patch autos, and a clear market lane for on-card autographs of modern names in the $200 to $300 range. It also reinforces that case hits can matter, particularly when the insert theme fits the wrestler’s identity as cleanly as Axiom’s masked card does.
Collectors tracking 2025 Topps Universe WWE should keep notes on which subsets are producing the most consistent demand. Autograph parallels with bold finishes, true 1/1s of iconic characters, and low-numbered memorabilia autos are doing the heavy lifting in these late-February comps, and they are likely to remain the primary drivers as more sales data rolls in.
