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WoW Card Price API

Real-time market prices for WoW cards and sealed products via REST API.

4,735
Cards
52
Sets
every 3 days
Price Updates
2
Print Types

About WoW Pricing Data

The World of Warcraft Trading Card Game, produced by Upper Deck Entertainment and later by Cryptozoic Entertainment, ran from 2006 to 2013 before Blizzard ended the license and transitioned to the digital Hearthstone. During its seven-year run, the WoW TCG built a massive card pool across multiple expansions and developed a devoted player base — but its most notable feature from a collector perspective was the Loot Cards: physical cards that redeemed for exclusive in-game WoW items like rare mounts, pets, and cosmetic toys. Many of these loot items are no longer obtainable through any other means, making certain Loot Cards extraordinarily valuable in the collector market.

Pricing data for the WoW TCG is uniquely fascinating because the value equation combines standard TCG collectible dynamics with the underlying value of the in-game reward. A card like the Spectral Tiger mount loot can command hundreds or thousands of dollars because WoW players still want that mount in the active online game. Standard (non-loot) TCG cards have more conventional TCG pricing patterns, though chase rares from early sets like Heroes of Azeroth and Through the Dark Portal have shown steady long-term appreciation. Unscratched loot codes are the ultimate chase category, with some prints routinely exceeding $5,000 at auction.

TCG API tracks World of Warcraft TCG pricing across the products that remain on TCGPlayer, including both standard cards and the iconic Loot Cards when sellers list them. For collectors tracking Loot Card market values, developers building WoW-nostalgia apps, or anyone researching discontinued TCG economics, our API captures this fascinating market study through the same consistent REST endpoints we use across 89+ games.

Quick Start

Search the WoW TCG for Loot Cards

cURL
curl "https://api.tcgapi.dev/v1/games/wow/search?q=loot&per_page=5"

Largest Sets

Dungeon Treasure 1 cards
Loot Cards 33 cards
Timewalkers Heroes 60 cards
Throne of the Tides 262 cards
Twilight of the Dragons 222 cards

...and 47 more sets. View Sets API →

Available Data

  • Card names & metadata
  • Market prices (Normal & Foil)
  • Price change tracking (24h/7d/30d)
  • Set & rarity information
  • Sealed product prices
  • Full-text search
  • Bulk data endpoints
  • Price history (Pro+)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the WoW TCG still being produced?
No. Blizzard ended the WoW TCG license in 2013 after the game transitioned to digital formats. The existing card pool represents the full game catalog. TCGPlayer continues to list WoW TCG product and secondary market activity remains surprisingly active due to Loot Card demand.
Are Loot Cards tracked separately from standard TCG cards?
Yes. Loot Cards are tracked as distinct products. Unscratched versions (with the in-game code intact) and scratched versions (redeemed) often have dramatically different pricing — the API may list them as separate entries when sellers differentiate.
Can I identify which Loot Cards grant still-valuable in-game items?
Card metadata reflects what TCGPlayer lists in product names, but the API does not cross-reference current WoW game state. For determining which Loot Cards are currently sought-after, community resources like WoWHead and the WoW collector community remain authoritative.
Is standard (non-loot) WoW TCG product still valuable?
Standard cards from the WoW TCG have more conventional TCG pricing patterns. Chase rares from early sets maintain value, and some sealed product has appreciated. The API tracks all of it consistently.

Popular Searches

WoW TCG Spectral TigerWoW TCG Loot CardWorld of Warcraft booster boxWoW TCG Heroes of AzerothWoW TCG mount loot

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