
Acollectible card game (CCG), also called atrading card game (TCG) among other names,[note 1] is a type ofcard game that mixesstrategic deck building elements with features oftrading cards.[2][3] The genre was introduced withMagic: The Gathering in 1993.
Cards in CCGs are specially designed sets ofplaying cards. Each card represents an element of the theme and rules of the game, and each can fall in categories such as creatures, enhancements, events, resources, and locations.[4] All cards within the CCG typically share the same common backsideart, while the front has a combination ofproprietary artwork or images toembellish the card along with instructions for the game andflavor text.[5] CCGs are typically themed around fantasy or science fiction genres, and have also includedhorror themes,cartoons, andsports, and may include licensedintellectual properties.[4]
Generally, aplayer will begin playing a CCG with a pre-madestarter deck, then later customize their deck with cards they acquire from semi-randombooster packs or trade with other players.[6] As a player obtains more cards, they may create new decks from scratch using the cards in their collection. Players choose what cards to add to their decks based on a particular strategy while also staying within the limits of the rule set. Games are commonly played between two players, thoughmultiplayer formats are also common.Gameplay in CCG is typically turn-based, with each player starting with a shuffled deck, then drawing and playing cards in turn to achieve awin condition before their opponent, often by scoring points or reducing their opponent'shit points.[4]Dice,counters,card sleeves, or play mats may be used to complement gameplay.[4] Players compete for prizes attournaments.[5]
Expansion sets are used to extend CCGs, introducing new gameplay strategies and narrative lore through new cards in starter decks and booster packs,[5] that may also lead to the development of theme decks. Successful CCGs typically have thousands of unique cards through multiple expansions.Magic: The Gathering initially launched with 300 unique cards[7] and currently has more than 22,000 as of March 2020[update].[8]
The first CCG,Magic: The Gathering, was developed byRichard Garfield and published byWizards of the Coast in 1993 and its initial runs rapidly sold out that year.[4] By the end of 1994,Magic: The Gathering had sold over 1 billion cards,[9] and during its most popular period, between 2008 and 2016, it sold over 20 billion cards.[10]Magic: The Gathering's early success led other game publishers to follow suit with their own CCGs in the following years.[4] Other successful CCGs includeYu-Gi-Oh![11] which is estimated to have sold about35 billion cards as of January 2021[update],[12] andPokémon which has sold over75 billion cards as of March 2025[update].[13] Other notable CCGs have come and gone, includingLegend of the Five Rings,Star Wars,Lord of the Rings,Vampire: The Eternal Struggle, andWorld of Warcraft. Manyother CCGs were produced but had little or no commercial success.[14]
Recently,digital collectible card games (DCCGs) have gained popularity, spurred by the success of online versions of CCGs likeMagic: The Gathering Online, and wholly digital CCGs likeHearthstone.[15] CCGs have further influenced other card game genres, includingdeck-building games likeDominion, and "Living card games" developed byFantasy Flight Games.
A collectible card game (CCG) is generally defined as a game where players acquire cards into a personal collection from which they create customized decks of cards and challenge other players in matches. Players usually start by purchasing a starter deck that is ready to play, but additional cards are obtained from randomized booster packs or by trading with other players.[16] The goal of most CCGs is to beat one's opponent by crafting customized decks that play tosynergies of card combinations. Refined decks will try to account forrandomness created by the initial shuffling of the deck, as well as the opponent's actions, by using complementary and preferably efficient cards.
The exact definition of what makes a CCG is varied, as many games are marketed under the "collectible card game" moniker. The basic definition requires the game to resembletrading cards in shape and function, be mass-produced for trading and/or collectibility, and have rules for strategic gameplay.[17][18] The definition of CCGs is further refined as being a card game in which the player uses their own deck with cards primarily sold in random assortments. If every card in the game can be obtained by making a small number of purchases, or if the manufacturer does not market it as a CCG, then it is not a CCG.[19]
CCGs can further be designated asliving ordead games. Dead games are those CCGs that are no longer supported by their manufacturers and have ceased releasing expansions. Living games are those CCGs that continue to be published by their manufacturers. Usually, this means that new expansions are being created for the game and official game tournaments are occurring in some fashion.[19][20]: 17–18

Each game has a fundamental set of rules that describes the players' objectives, the categories of cards used in the game, and the basic rules by which the cards interact. Each card will have additional text explaining that specific card's effect on the game. Many games utilize a set of keywords to simplify the card text, with keywords referring to common gameplay rules. For example,Magic: The Gathering hasabout 25 common keywords such as "flying", meaning the creature can only be blocked by other creatures with flying. Each card also generally represents some specific element derived from the game's genre, setting, or source material. The cards are illustrated and named for these source elements, and the card's game function may relate to the subject. For example,Magic: The Gathering is based on the fantasy genre, so many of the cards represent creatures and magical spells from that setting. In the game, adragon is illustrated as a reptilian beast, has higher stats than smaller creatures, and has the aforementioned "flying" keyword.Flavor text on cards is frequently used to provide a narrative for story-driven games or sometimes as humorous asides.
The bulk of games are designed around a resource system by which the pace of each game is controlled. Frequently, the cards which constitute a player's deck are considered a resource, and the frequency of cards moving from the deck to the play area or the player's hand is tightly controlled. Relative card strength is often balanced by the number or type of resources needed in order to play the card, and pacing after that may be determined by the flow of cards moving in and out of play. Resources may be specific cards themselves or represented by other means (for example, tokens in various resource pools, symbols on cards, etc.).
Unlike traditional card games such aspoker orcrazy eights in which a deck's content is limited and pre-determined, players select which cards will compose their deck from any available cards printed for the game. This allows a player to strategically customize their deck to take advantage of favorable card interactions, combinations, and statistics. Deck sizes vary from CCG to CCG, needing to be large enough for variation in gameplay while small enough that the decks areshuffleable. Typical deck sizes range from as low as 30 cards (as used by, for instance,Hearthstone) to as high as 100 cards (as inMagic: The Gathering's Commander format). Many CCGs limit how many copies of a particular card can be included in a deck; such limits force players to think creatively when choosing cards and deciding on a playing strategy.
Cards come in several broad categories. Common categories, in addition to the aforementioned resource cards, include creatures that are summoned into battle who attack the opposing player and block their creatures' attacks; enchantments thatbuff or debuff these creatures' attributes and abilities; events, such as magic spells, that may have an immediate or ongoing resolution to one or more cards in play; and locations or story cards that present specific conditions impacting all actions.[4]
Each match is generally one-on-one, but many games have variants for more players. Typically, the goal of a match is to play cards that reduce the opponent's life total to zero before the opponent can do the same. Some games provide for a match to end if a player has no more cards to draw in their deck. After determining which player goes first bycoin flip or other means, players start by shuffling their decks and drawing an initial hand. Many games allow for a player to take amulligan if they believe their starting hand is not good. Players then take turns. While the turn format is different depending on the game, typically it is broken into distinct phases, and all of their resources are reset so they may be used that turn. Players draw a card, play any number of cards by drawing from available resources, and make one or more attacks on their opponent. If necessary, there may be a cleanup step, including discarding cards to reach a maximum hand size.
Many games have rules enabling opposing players to react to the current player's turn; for example, a player may cast a counter-spell to cancel an opponent's spell. Games with such reaction systems typically define rules to determine the priority of reactions to avoid potential conflicts between card interpretations. Other games do not have such direct reaction systems but allow players to cast face-down cards or "traps" that automatically trigger based on the actions of the opposing player.
Specific game cards are most often produced in various degrees of scarcity, generally denoted asfixed (F),common (C),uncommon (U), andrare (R). Some games use alternate or additional designations for the relative rarity levels, such assuper-,ultra-,mythic- orexclusive rares. Special cards may also only be available through promotions, events, purchase of related material, or redemption programs. The idea of rarity borrows somewhat from other types of collectible cards, such asbaseball cards, but in CCGs, the level of rarity also denotes the significance of a card's effect in the game, i.e., the more powerful a card is in terms of the game, the greater its rarity.[21] A powerful card whose effects were underestimated by the game's designers may increase in rarity in later reprints. Such a card might even be removed entirely from the next edition, to further limit its availability and its effect on gameplay.

Most collectible card games are distributed as sealed packs containing a subset of the available cards, much like trading cards. The most common distribution methods are:
Because of the rarity distribution of cards, many popular CCGs have asecondary marketplace, with players buying and selling cards based on perceived value. Many purchases are made to acquire rarer cards to help build competitive decks, while others are just for collection purposes. In some cases, early cards in a CCGs run or which have been banned from play can become of high value to collectors, such asMagic: The Gathering'sPower Nine.[4]
There are similar games, usually inspired by CCGs, that should not be mistaken for CCGs:
Many CCGs have also been remade intodigital collectible card games (DCCGs), taking advantage of the ubiquity of the Internet for online play as well as for the potential of computerized opponents. DCCGs can exist as online counterparts of existing CCGs, such asMagic: The Gathering Online forMagic: the Gathering, as wholly original card games that take advantage of the digital space, such asHearthstone, or in many other forms.[4]

Regularcard games have been around since at least the 1300s.The Base Ball Card Game, a prototype from 1904, is a notable precursor to CCGs because it had a few similar qualities but it never saw production to qualify it as acollectible card game.[27] It is not known if the game was intended to be a standalone product or something altogether different likeTop Trumps.[14] The game consisted of a limited 112 cards and never saw manufacture past the marketing stage.[28]
The first pre-CCG to make it to market was theBaseball Card Game, released byTopps in 1951 as an apparent followup to a game from 1947 calledBatter Up Baseball by Ed-u-Cards Corp. Players created teams ofhitters, represented by cards, and moved them around abaseball diamond according to cards representing baseball plays drawn from a randomized deck. Like modern CCGs, Topps' Baseball Card Game was sold in randomized packs and were collectible; however, it lacked the necessary strategic play that defines a CCG.[29] Interaction between the two players was limited to who scored the most points and was otherwise asolitaire-like function since players could not play simultaneously.[30] Other notable entries that resemble and predate the CCG areStrat-O-Matic,Nuclear War,BattleCards, andIlluminati.[19]
Allen Varney ofDragon Magazine claimed the designer ofCosmic Encounter, published in 1979,Peter Olotka, spoke of the idea of designing a collectible card game as early as 1979.[31]

Prior to the advent of the CCG, the market for alternative games was dominated byrole-playing games (RPG), in particularDungeons & Dragons byTSR.Wizards of the Coast (Wizards), a new company formed inPeter Adkison's basement in 1990, was looking to enter the RPG market with its series calledThe Primal Order which convertedcharacters to other RPG series. After alawsuit fromPalladium Books which could have financially ruined the company, Wizards acquired another RPG calledTalislanta. This was afterLisa Stevens joined the company in 1991 as vice president after having leftWhite Wolf. Through their mutual friend Mike Davis, Adkison metRichard Garfield who at the time was a doctoral student. Garfield and Davis had an idea for a game calledRoboRally and pitched the idea to Wizards of the Coast in 1991, but Wizards did not have the resources to manufacture it and instead challenged Garfield to make a game that would pay for the creation of RoboRally. This game would require minimal resources to make and only about 15–20 minutes to play.[19]
In December 1991, Garfield had a prototype for a game calledMana Clash, and by 1993 he established Garfield Games to attract publishers and to get a larger share of the company should it become successful. When designingMagic: The Gathering, Garfield borrowed elements from the board gameCosmic Encounter which also used cards for gameplay,[32] and fromStrat-o-Matic baseball, in which players build a team of players before the baseball game itself is played.[33]
In 1993 a "new kind of card game" appeared.[32] It was different because the player could not buy all the cards at once. Players would first buy starter decks and then later be encouraged to buy booster packs to expand their selection of cards. What emerged was a card game that players collected and treasured but also played with.[32] The first collectible card game created wasMagic: The Gathering, invented byRichard Garfield, and patented byWizards of the Coast in 1993.[17][19][32][34][35][36][37] The game has remained popular,[38] with Wizards of the Coast claiming it to be the most widely played CCG as of 2009.[39][note 2] It was based on Garfield's gameFive Magics from 1982.[29] Originally,Mana Clash was designed with Wizards in mind, but the suit between Palladium Books and Wizards was still not settled. Investment money was eventually secured from Wizards and the nameMana Clash was changed toMagic: The Gathering. The ads for it first appeared inCryptych, a magazine that focused on RPGs. On 4 July weekend of 1993, the game premiered at theOrigins Game Fair inFort Worth,Texas. In the following month of August, the game'sLimited core set was released (also known asAlpha) and sold out its initial print run of 2.6 million cards immediately creating more demand. Wizards quickly released a second print run calledBeta (7.3 million card print run) and then a second core set calledUnlimited (35 million card print run) in an attempt to satisfy orders as well as to fix small errors in the game. December also saw the release of the first expansion calledArabian Nights. WithMagic: The Gathering still the only CCG on the market, it released another expansion calledAntiquities which experienced collation problems. Another core set iteration namedRevised was released shortly after that. Demand was still not satiated as the game grew by leaps and bounds.Legends was released in mid-1994 and no end was in sight for the excitement over the new CCG.[19][41]
What followed was the CCG craze.Magic was so popular that game stores could not satisfy the market demand. More and more orders came for the product, and as other game makers looked on they realized that they had to capitalize on this new fad. The first to do so was TSR who rushed their own gameSpellfire into production, releasing it in June 1994. Through this period of time,Magic was hard to obtain because production never kept pace with demand. Store owners placed large inflated orders in an attempt to circumvent allocations placed by distributors. This practice would eventually catch up to them when printing capacity met demand coinciding with the expansion ofFallen Empires released in November 1994. Combined with the releases of 9 other CCGs, among themGalactic Empires,Decipher'sStar Trek,On the Edge, andSuper Deck!.Steve Jackson Games, which was heavily involved in the alternative game market, looked to tap into the new CCG market and figured the best way was to adapt their existingIlluminati game. The result wasIlluminati: New World Order which followed with two expansions in 1995 and 1998. Another entry by Wizards of the Coast wasJyhad. The game sold well, but not nearly as well asMagic; however, it was considered a great competitive move by Wizard as Jyhad was based on one of the most popularintellectual properties in the alternative game market which kept White Wolf from aggressively competing withMagic. By this time, however, it may have been a moot point as the CCG Market had hit its first obstacle: too much product. The overprinted expansion ofMagic'sFallen Empires threatened to upset the relationship that Wizards had with its distributors as many complained of getting too much product, despite their original over-ordering practices.[19][42][43]
In early 1995, theGAMA Trade Show previewed upcoming games for the year. One out of every three games announced at the show was a CCG. Publishers other than game makers were now entering the CCG market such asDonruss,Upper Deck,Fleer,Topps,Comic Images, and others. The CCGbubble appeared to be on everyone's mind. Too many CCGs were being released and not enough players existed to meet the demand. In 1995 alone, 38 CCGs entered the market, the most notable among them beingDoomtrooper,Middle-earth,OverPower,Rage,Shadowfist,Legend of the Five Rings, andSimCity.Jyhad saw a makeover and was renamed asVampire: The Eternal Struggle to distance itself from theIslamic termjihad as well as to get closer to the source material.[19] The Star Trek CCG from Decipher was almost terminated after disputes withParamount announced that the series would end in 1997. But by the end of the year, the situation was resolved and Decipher regained the license to theStar Trek franchise along withDeep Space Nine,Voyager and the movieFirst Contact.[19]
The enthusiasm from manufacturers was very high, but by the summer of 1995 atGen Con, retailers had noticed CCG sales were lagging. TheMagic expansionChronicles was released in November and was essentially a compilation of older sets. It was maligned by collectors and they claimed it devalued their collections. Besides this aspect, the market was still reeling from too much product asFallen Empires still sat on shelves alongside newerMagic expansions likeIce Age. The one new CCG that retailers were hoping to save their sales,Star Wars, was not released until very late in December. By then, Wizards of the Coast, the lead seller in the CCG market had announced a downsizing in their company and it was followed by a layoff of over 30 jobs. The excess product and lag in sales also coincided with an eight-month-long gap betweenMagic: The Gathering's expansions, the longest in its history.[19][42]
In Hungary,Power Cards Card Game, or HKK, was released in 1995 and was inspired byMagic: The Gathering. HKK was later released in the Czech Republic. HKK is still being made.[44][45]
Garfield applied for a patent for "a novel method of gameplay and game components that in one embodiment are in the form of trading cards" that includes claims covering games whose rules include many ofMagic's elements in combination, including concepts such as changing the orientation of a game component to indicate use (referred to in theMagic andVampire: The Eternal Struggle rules as "tapping") and constructing a deck by selecting cards from a larger pool.[46] Garfield was granted the patent in 1997, which he then transferred the patent toWizards of the Coast.[47] The patent has aroused criticism from some observers, who believe it may have stifled growth of other CCGs, and looked to have some of its claims to be invalid.[48] Peter Adkison, CEO of Wizards at the time, remarked that his company was interested in striking a balance between the "free flow of ideas and the continued growth of the game business" with "the ability to be compensated by others who incorporate our patented method of play into their games".[49] Adkison continued to say they "had no intention of stifling" the industry that originated from the "success of Magic".[49]

In early 1996, the CCG market was still reeling from its recent failures and glut of products, including the release of Wizards' expansionHomelands which was rated as the worstMagic expansion to date. The next two years would mark a "cool off" period for the over-saturated CCG market. Additionally, manufacturers slowly came to understand that having a CCG was not enough to keep it alive. They also had to support organized players through tournaments. Combined with a new dichotomy between collectors and players especially amongMagic players, more emphasis was placed on the game rather than the collectibility of the cards.[19]
Plenty more CCGs were introduced in 1996, chief among them wereBattleTech,The X-Files,Mythos, and Wizards' very ownNetrunner. Many established CCGs were in full swing releasing expansions every few months, but even by this time, many CCGs released only two years earlier had already been terminated. TSR had ceased production ofSpellfire and attempted another collectible game calledDragon Dice which failed shortly after being released.[19]
On 3 June 1997, Wizards of the Coast announced that it had acquired TSR and itsDungeons & Dragons property which also gave them control of Gen Con.[50] Wizards now had its long-sought role-playing game, and it quickly discontinued all plans to continue producing Dragon Dice or resuming production of theSpellfire CCG. Decipher was now sanctioning tournaments for theirStar Trek andStar Wars games, with the latter also enjoying strong success from the re-releasedStar WarsSpecial Edition films. TheStar Wars CCG would remain the second best-selling CCG until the introduction ofPokémon to the United States in 1999.[19]
Wizards continued acquiring properties and boughtFive Rings Publishing Group, Inc., creators of theLegend of the Five Rings CCG,Star Trek: The Next Generation Collectible Dice Game, and the soon to be releasedDune CCG, on 26 June.[51] Wizards also acquiredAndon Unlimited which by association gave them control over the Origins Convention. By September, Wizards was awarded a patent for its "Trading Card Game". Later in October, Wizards announced that it would seek royalty payments from other CCG companies. Allegedly, onlyHarper Prism announced its intention to pay these royalties for its gameImajica. Other CCGs acknowledged the patent on their packaging.[19][20][42]
1997 saw a slow down in the release of new CCG games. Only 7 new games came out, among them:Dune: Eye of the Storm,Babylon 5,Shadowrun,Imajica andAliens/Predator.Babylon 5 saw moderate success for a few years before its publisherPrecedence succumbed to a nonrenewal of its license later on in 2001. Also in 1997,Vampire: The Eternal Struggle ceased production. However, Wizards of the Coast attempted to enter a more mainstream market with the release of a simplified version ofMagic, calledPortal. Its creation is considered a failure, along with its follow-upPortal Second Age released in 1998.[19]

By February 1998, one out of every two CCGs sold wasMagic: the Gathering.[19] Only 7 new CCGs were introduced that year, all but two being Wizards of the Coast product.C-23,Doomtown,Hercules: The Legendary Journeys,Legend of the Burning Sands andXena: Warrior Princess were those five, and onlyDoomtown met with better than average reviews before its run was terminated and the rights returned toAlderac.C-23,Hercules, andXena were all a part of a new simplified CCG system Wizards had created for beginners. Called the ARC System, it had four distinct types of cards: Resource, Character, Combat, and Action. The system also utilized the popular "tapping" mechanic ofMagic: The Gathering. This system was abandoned shortly afterward.[19]
Despite limited success or no success at all in the rest of the CCG market,Magic had recovered and Wizards learned from its lessons of 1995 and early 1996. Players still enjoyed the game and were acquiring its latest expansions ofTempest,Stronghold,Exodus and by year's end,Urza's Saga which added new enthusiasm toMagic's fanbase in light of some of the cards being "too powerful".[19]
In early 1999, Wizards released the English-language version of thePokémon TCG to the mass market (the original Japanese version of the game having been released byMedia Factory in 1996). The game benefited from thePokémon fad also of that year. At first, there was not enough product to meet demand. Some retailers perceived the shortage to be, in part, related to Wizards' recent purchase of theGame Keeper stores where it was assumed they receivedPokémon shipments more often than non-affiliated stores. By the summer of 1999, thePokémon TCG became the first CCG to outsellMagic: The Gathering. The success ofPokémon brought renewed interest to the CCG market and many new companies began pursuing this established customer base. Large retail stores such asWalmart andTarget began carrying CCGs and by the end of September,Hasbro was convinced on its profitability and bought Wizards of the Coast for $325 million (equivalent to $613.4 million in 2024).[19][20]
A small selection of new CCGs also arrived in 1999, among themYoung Jedi,Tomb Raider,Austin Powers,7th Sea andThe Wheel of Time.[19]
By 2000, the volatility of the CCG market was familiar to its retailers. They foresawPokémon's inevitable fall from grace as the fad reached its peak in April of that year. The panic associated with the overflooding of the CCGs from 1995 and 1996 was absent and the retailers withstood the crash ofPokémon. Yet CCGs benefited from the popularity ofPokémon and they saw an uptick in the number of CCGs released and an overall increased interest in the genre.Pokémon's mainstream success in the CCG world also highlighted an increasing trend of CCGs being marketed with existing intellectual properties, especially those with an existing television show, such as ananime. New CCGs introduced in 2000 included notable entries inSailor Moon,The Terminator,Digi-Battle,Dragon Ball Z Collectible Card Game,Magi-Nation andX-Men.Vampires: The Eternal Struggle resumed production in 2000 after White Wolf regained full rights and released the first new expansion in three years calledSabbat War. Wizards of the Coast introduced a new sports CCG calledMLB Showdown as well.[19]
Decipher released its final chronological expansion of the originalStar Wars trilogy calledDeath Star II and would continue to see a loss in sales as interest waned in succeeding expansions, and theirStar Wars license was not being renewed.Mage Knight was also released this year and would seek to challenge the CCG market by introducingminiatures into the mix. Though not technically a CCG, it would target the same player base for sales. The real shake-up in the industry, however, came when Hasbro laid off more than 100 workers at Wizards of the Coast and ended its attempts at an online version of the game when it sold off the subsidiary's interactive division. Coinciding with this turn of events was Peter Adkisson's decision to resign and Lisa Stevens whose job ended whenThe Duelist magazine (published by Wizards of the Coast) was canceled by the parent company. With Adkisson went Wizards' acquisition of Gen Con and the Origins Convention went to GAMA. Hasbro also ceased production ofLegends of the Five Rings in 2000, but its production resumed when after it was sold to Alderac in 2001.[19][42]
The years 2001 and 2002 progressed with the CCG market being less likely to take risks on new and original intellectual properties, but instead, it would invest in CCGs that were based on existing franchises. Cartoons, movies, television, and books influenced the creation of such CCGs asHarry Potter,The Lord of the Rings,A Game of Thrones,Buffy the Vampire Slayer,Yu-Gi-Oh! and twoStar Wars CCGs:Jedi Knights and a rebootedStar Wars TCG, by Decipher and Wizards of the Coast. They followed the demise of the originalStar Wars CCG by Decipher in December 2001, but they would see very little interest and eventually the two games were canceled. Other niche CCGs were also made, includingWarlord: Saga of the Storm andWarhammer 40,000.[19][20]
Upper Deck had its first hit withYu-Gi-Oh! The game was known to be popular in Japan but until 2002 had not been released in the United States. The game was mostly distributed to national retailers, withhobby stores added to their distribution afterward. By the end of 2002, the game was the top CCG even though it was nowhere near the phenomenon thatPokémon was. The card publisher Precedence produced a new CCG in 2001 based on theRifts RPG byPalladium.Rifts had top-of-the-line artwork but the size of the starter deck was similar in size to the RPG books. Precedence's other main CCGBabylon 5 ended its decent run in 2001 after the company lost its license. The game was terminated and the publisher later folded in 2002. The release ofThe Lord of the Rings TCG marked the release of the 100th new CCG since 1993, and 2002 also marked the release of the 500th CCG expansion for all CCGs.The Lord of the Rings TCG briefly beat out sales ofMagic for a few months.[20]
Magic continued a steady pace releasing successful expansion blocks withOdyssey andOnslaught. Decipher releasedThe Motion Pictures expansion for theStar Trek CCG, and also announced that it would be the last expansion for the game. Decipher then released theSecond Edition for theStar Trek CCG which refined the rules, rebooted the game, and introduced new card frames.Collectible miniature games continued their effort to take market share away from the CCG market with the releases ofHeroClix andMechWarrior in 2002 but saw limited success.[20]
The next few years saw an increase in the number of companies willing to start a new CCG, partly owing to the success ofPokémon andYu-Gi-Oh!. New CCGs entered the market, many of which tried to continue the trend of franchise tie-ins. Notable entries includeThe Simpsons,SpongeBob SquarePants,Neopets,G.I. Joe,Hecatomb,Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and many others.Duel Masters was introduced to the United States after strong popularity in Japan the preceding two years. Wizards of the Coast published it for a couple of years before weak sales resulted in its cancellation. TwoWarhammer CCGs were released withHorus Heresy andWarCry.Horus Heresy lasted two years and was succeeded byDark Millennium in 2005.
Also, two entries from Decipher were released, one that passed the torch from theirStar Wars CCG toWARS.WARS kept most of the gameplay mechanics from theirStar Wars game, but transferred them to a new and original setting. The game did not do particularly well, and after two expansions, the game was canceled in 2005. The other new CCG was.hack//Enemy which won an Origins award. The game was also canceled in 2005.[52]
Plenty of other CCGs were attempted by various publishers, many that were based on Japanesemanga such asBeyblade,Gundam War,One Piece,Inuyasha,Zatch Bell!,Case Closed, andYuYu Hakusho. Existing CCGs were reformatted or rebooted includingDragon Ball Z asDragon Ball GT andDigimon D-Tector as theDigimon Collectible Card Game.
An interesting CCG released by Upper Deck was called theVs. System. It incorporated theMarvel andDC Comics universes and pitted the heroes and villains from those universes against one another. Similarly, the gameUFS: The Universal Fighting System used characters fromStreet Fighter,Soul Calibur,Tekken,Mega Man,Darkstalkers, etc. This CCG was obtained byJasco Games in 2010 and is currently still being made. Another CCG titledCall of Cthulhu was the spiritual successor toMythos by the publisherChaosium. Chaosium licensed the game toFantasy Flight Games who produced the CCG.
Probably one of the biggest developments in the CCG market was the release ofMagic's8th Edition core set. It introduced a redesigned card border and it would later mark the beginning of a new play format titledModern that utilized cards from this set onward. Another development wasPokémon, originally published in English by Wizards, having its publishing rights transferred toPokémon USA, Inc. in June 2003.
The previous year's influx ofnew CCGs continued into 2006. Riding on the success of the popularPC GameWorld of Warcraft,Blizzard Entertainment licensed Upper Deck to publish a TCG based on the game. TheWorld of Warcraft TCG was born and was carried by major retailers but saw limited success until it was discontinued in 2013 prior to the release of Blizzard's digital card gameHearthstone. Following previous trends, Japanese-influenced CCGs continued to enter the market. These games were either based on cartoons, anime, or manga and included:Naruto,Avatar: The Last Airbender,Bleach,Rangers Strike and the classic seriesRobotech.Dragon Ball GT was rebooted once again in 2008 and renamed asDragon Ball. Many other franchises were made into CCGs with a few reboots. Notable ones includedCardfight!! Vanguard,Conan,Battlestar Galactica,Power Rangers,24 TCG,Redakai,Monsuno, and others, as well as another attempt atDoctor Who in the United Kingdom and Australia. Publisher Alderac released theCity of Heroes CCG based on theCity of Heroes PC game. Another video game,Kingdom Hearts for the PS2, was turned into theKingdom Hearts TCG byTomy.
A few other CCGs were released only in other countries and never made it overseas to English speaking countries, includingMonster Hunter of Japan, andVandaria Wars [id] ofIndonesia. By the end of 2008, trouble was brewing betweenKonami, who owned the rights toYu-Gi-Oh! and its licensee Upper Deck. Meanwhile, strong sales continued with the three top CCGs ofPokémon,Yu-Gi-Oh!, andMagic: the Gathering. The Warhammer seriesDark Millennium ended its run in 2007.

Magic: the Gathering saw a large player boom in 2009, with the release of theZendikar expansion. The spike in the number ofMagic players continued for a few years and leveled off by 2015.[53] Interest also developed with their multiplayer format calledCommander. This increase in the player base created aMagic subculture based onfinance speculation. New players entering the market from 2009 to 2015 desired cards that were printed before 2009 and with smaller print runs. Demand outstripped quantity and prices of certain cards increased and speculators started to directly manipulate theMagic card market to their advantage. This eventually attracted the interest of the controversial figureMartin Shkreli, former CEO ofTuring Pharmaceuticals, for a brief period of time.[54] Prices of cards from previous sets increased dramatically and the American market saw an influx of Chinesecounterfeits capitalizing on the demand. This created a unique situation where the most desirable and expensive cards could be printed by counterfeiters, but not by the brand owner, due to a promise made with collectors in 1996 and refined in 2011.[55][56] In 2015, Wizards of the Coast implemented more anti-counterfeit measures by introducing a holographic foil onto cards with specific rarities, in addition to creating a proprietary font.[57][58] Between the time period of 2008 to 2016, Magic: the Gathering sold over 20 billion cards.[10]
A rise in tie-in collectible card games continued with the introduction of theMy Little Pony Collectible Card Game. It was licensed to Enterplay LLC by Hasbro and published on 13 December 2013.[59] The collectible cards, according to president Dean Irwin, proved to be moderately successful, so Enterplay reprinted the premiere release set mid-February 2014.[59] Other tie-in games released included theFinal Fantasy Trading Card Game andStar Wars: Destiny; which had collectible cards anddice which after a 3-year run ended production in early 2020.Force of Will was released in 2012 in Japan and in 2013 in English, but as an original intellectual property.
One of the longest running CCGs,Legend of the Five Rings, released its final setEvil Portents for free in 2015. After a 20-year run, the brand was sold to Fantasy Flight Games and released as an LCG.[60]
In March 2018, it was announced that PlayFusion andGames Workshop would team up to create a newWarhammer trading card game.[61]
Forbes reported that the global Trading Card Game market size in 2022 was valued at $2.99 billion and it is expected to reach $4.2 billion by 2028.[62]
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In 1996, Luke Peterschmidt, designer ofGuardians, remarked that unlike board game andRPG players, CCG players seem to assume they can only play one CCG at a time.[63] Often, the less popular CCGs will have localized sales success; in some cities a CCG will be a hit, but in many others it will be a flop.[64]
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Likelootboxes invideo games, there are concerns about the random and sealed booster packs.[65] However, challenges to whether booster packs are equivalent to gambling have failed to hold up in court, as CCGs typically follow similar rules established for baseball card distribution. These include that the publisher states what the rarity expectations are for a booster pack, and that all cards they sell have equal value; it is only the secondary market that assigns speculative value to rarer cards that elevates their price. Since the publisher has no interaction with the secondary market, this helps to insulate their from gambling concerns.[66]
A survey among users of Reddit's online message boards found little evidence of the need to regulate collectible card games.[67] This concern for gambling plays a big part of the brand messaging forLiving Card Games with fixed non-randomized distribution of cards.[68]