Last updated on February 24, 2026

Donatello, Gadget Master - Illustration by Kotakan

Donatello, Gadget Master | Illustration by Kotakan

While Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (TMT) has received plenty of hate centered around pizza-centric art and the New York setting unpopularized by Marvelโ€™s Spider-Man (SPM), not all the coverage has been negative. Content creator @SaffronOlive took to X to discuss the high value of the setโ€™s Collector Boosters, based on a YouTube video he did opening $2000 of product:

Source Material Reprint Value

Saffron Olive credited most of the setโ€™s value to its source material reprints. Source material cards feature borderless art that highlights iconic moments throughout the franchiseโ€™s history, with a general focus on comic book art, and they have the set code PZA. Though TMT only has 20 source material cards (a sharp contrast to Avatar: the Last Airbenderโ€™s 61 source material cards or SPMโ€™s 40) the reprint quality is extremely high, with a collection of Commander staples including but not limited to Doubling Season, Trouble in Pairs, and All Will Be One.

Saffron Olive notes these high-value reprints โ€œsolves one of the biggest feel-bads of opening collector boosters (cracking a $40 pack and getting nothing of value),โ€ going so far as to say โ€œfor maybe the first time ever it actually felt worth cracking collector boosters.โ€

On the topic of source material cards, itโ€™s important to note that while non-foil PZA cards can be found in Play Boosters and Collector Boosters, traditional foil PZA cards are only available in TMT Collector Boosters, per Wizardโ€™s article about collecting TMT.

Additional Reprint Treatments

In addition to the reprints on the PZA source material sheet, Saffron Olive mentions that โ€œSpider-Man had zero special foils, TMT has multiple (surge and fractured)โ€. This makes hitting high-value cards much easier because you do not need to hit the fraction of a percentage chance of opening a serialized or headliner card.

For context, the odds of opening specific cards are laid out in Wizardโ€™s collecting article. For example, every Collector Booster has a foiled basic land slot, which could contain a traditional foil pizza land 66.7% of the time, a surge foil pizza land 11.1% of the time, or a surge foil rooftop basic, 22.2% of the time. The article specifies that some cards appear less than 1% of the time (this is the value for fracture foil Japanese showcase cards and some mythic rare reprints from the Turtle Power! precon) but it only says that โ€œKevin Eastman headliner cards appear in this slot at a low rate in Collector Boosters.โ€ This presumably means they occur far, far less than 1% of timeโ€”so having alternatives is great for the aspiring Collector Booster opener.

Can The Value Hold?

Saffron Oliveโ€™s tweets were met with quite a bit of backlash, most of which came from, at best, trolls reacting to their dislike of the set, but there is genuine criticism to be had. In a reply to Amazonian, another content creator who showed support for Saffron Olive and agreed with the reprint value, @lucidDonald notes that โ€œif [source material cards] are as prevalent as he claims, then as soon as the set dropsโ€ prices will plummetโ€”a typical response to supply hitting the market, and one that undercuts his argument.

Card prices are always volatile around the time a set drops. Hype can drive up the price of a card, only for it to flounder in a format that wasnโ€™t equipped for it. Or a card everybody ignored suddenly becomes a Commander darling, and the price spikes. While the current prices of source material cards is solid, thereโ€™s no guarantee that they will maintain that price. The price of fracture foils often remains due to scarcity, but claims that the source material cards can make up a significant portion of the Collector Boosterโ€™s value might not hold true past March 6th.

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