
THE MOST VALUABLE DOCTOR DOOM COMIC CUTS — RANKED
From $500 pulls to $18,500 grails: a Command Briefing on the cards reshaping the market
KEY FINDINGS
- The Superfractor Chrome Platinum (#107) sold for $18,500 — making it the single most expensive Doctor Doom Comic Cut on record.
- Silver Surfer vs. Doom comic cuts featuring the iconic Galactus Trilogy panels are consistently commanding $3,000+ on the secondary market.
- PSA-graded comic cuts (PSA 8-10) are selling for 2-5x their raw counterparts, with a PSA 10 Iron Man cut reaching $12,000.
- SDCC exclusive boxes purchased for $100 at the convention are now selling for $500-$800 sealed, with individual pulls exceeding $1,500.
The Doctor Doom Comic Cuts from 2025 Topps Marvel Mint have become the most talked-about trading card product in the Marvel collecting community. With only 200 unique 1/1 cards in existence — each containing an authentic first-print comic panel physically cut from the original pages — these aren't just trading cards. They're irreplaceable pieces of Marvel history encased in plastic.
What makes this set extraordinary is the source material. These panels were cut from actual first-print comic books spanning Doctor Doom's 60+ year history. From Jack Kirby and Stan Lee's original Fantastic Four #5 (1962) artwork to Jonathan Hickman's God Emperor Doom in Secret Wars (2015), each card represents a moment that can never be replicated.
The market has responded accordingly. When boxes first hit shelves at $200, collectors were skeptical. A comic cut? In a trading card? But as the first pulls surfaced on social media — showing vivid, perfectly preserved panels from Silver Age classics — demand exploded. Boxes quickly climbed to $500-$800, and individual cards began commanding four and five-figure prices.
The highest confirmed sale to date is the Superfractor Chrome Platinum variant (#107), which sold for an astonishing $18,500. This card features a full-panel Doctor Doom illustration from a classic Fantastic Four issue, encased in Topps' premium chrome treatment with a mirror-finish platinum border. Only one exists.
Close behind is the Silver Surfer confrontation cut, which depicts the legendary battle between Doom and the Silver Surfer from the Galactus Trilogy. Multiple versions of this scene exist across the 200-card set, but the specific panel showing Doom stealing the Power Cosmic has been the most sought-after, with confirmed sales above $3,000.
The grading premium on these cards is significant. Raw (ungraded) comic cuts typically sell in the $500-$1,500 range depending on the panel and character featured. But send that same card to PSA and receive a 9 or 10, and the value can multiply dramatically. The Iron Man confrontation cut — already a desirable card raw — sold for $12,000 after receiving a PSA 10 Gem Mint grade.
SDCC exclusives represent a unique category within the set. Topps sold exclusive boxes at San Diego Comic-Con for $100 each, and these contained specially marked comic cuts with SDCC branding. Collectors who purchased at the convention are now sitting on significant gains, with sealed SDCC boxes trading for $500-$800 and individual SDCC pulls like the Hulk confrontation cut listed at $1,500+.
The Wolverine/Patch variant is another standout. Featuring the iconic scene of Wolverine in his Patch disguise confronting Doom in Madripoor, this card sold for $1,999 — a testament to the cross-collecting appeal when two major Marvel characters share a panel.
What's driving these prices? Three factors converge: First, the upcoming Avengers: Doomsday movie (May 2026) starring Robert Downey Jr. as Doctor Doom has created unprecedented demand for Doom-related collectibles. Second, the 1/1 nature of each card means there is zero supply elasticity — once a card sells, the only way to acquire it is to convince the current owner to part with it. Third, the comic cut concept itself is revolutionary — these aren't printed reproductions, they're actual pieces of comic book history.
For collectors considering entry into this market, the window is narrowing. Of the 200 cards in the set, only 73 have been publicly documented so far. That means 127 cards are still out there — in sealed boxes, in private collections, or waiting to be discovered. As more cards surface and the Doomsday movie release approaches, expect prices to continue climbing.
Our recommendation: if you're holding a comic cut, get it graded. The PSA premium is real and substantial. If you're looking to buy, focus on cards featuring iconic confrontations (Silver Surfer, Iron Man, Wolverine) or historically significant panels (Fantastic Four #5, Secret Wars). And if you find one in a sealed box? Congratulations — you're holding a piece of Marvel history that's only going to appreciate.
"These aren't just trading cards. They're irreplaceable pieces of Marvel history encased in plastic — and the market is just beginning to understand what that means.
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DID YOU KNOW?
MARKET SNAPSHOT: 73 of 200 cards documented | Highest sale: $18,500 (Superfractor Chrome Platinum) | Average raw sale: $500-$1,500 | PSA premium: 2-5x raw value | Box price: $500-$800 (up from $200 at launch) | SDCC boxes: $500-$800 sealed
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