10 Most Valuable Cards in Riftbound: Origins

With Riftbound's first set, Origins, now in the hands of fans worldwide, which are the most valuable cards in the set? Let's find out!
Most Valuable Riftbound Origins cards featured

The League of Legends Trading Card Game (or TCG), Riftbound, has arrived. Its first set, Origins, reveals an accessible game with an area control feel which evokes the spirit of its source material, the aforementioned online multiplayer title, League of Legends. With Origins already proving incredibly popular, what are the most valuable cards you can find in booster packs? Let’s find out, as we check out the most valuable cards in Riftbound: Origins!

10. Yasuo, Unforgiven – Showcase, 305/298

Yasuo Unforgiven Showcase card
Image credit: Riot Games

Riftbound Game Director, Dave Guskin, named Yasuo as his favorite Legend in the Origins set when we spoke to him earlier in 2025. Here, Yasuo appears in his Showcase card variant.

9. Lee Sin, Blind Monk – Showcase, 304/298

Lee Sin Blind Monk Showcase card
Image credit: Riot Games

With Lee Sin’s Blind Monk card here also as a Showcase card, you may be wondering how to tell when you have one of these cards. Showcase cards are a type of “overnumber” card; these have numbers that go above the designated number of cards in a set. With Riftbound: Origins having 298 cards in its “base” set, any cards numbered above 298 are overnumber cards. Lee Sin’s card number is 304/298, so it is of course considered an overnumber card.

8. Volibear, Relentless Storm – Showcase, 300/298

Volibear Relentless Storm Showcase card
Image credit: Riot Games

With Volibear, Relentless Storm’s Showcase card being numbered 300/298, it’s also an overnumber card. So how rare are these cards? Overnumber cards appear at the rate of roughly 1 in every 3 booster boxes, meaning you’re likely to find them in just 1 in every 72 booster packs! This explains why they’re so sought after, and why so many of them appear on the list of he most valuable cards from Riftbound: Origins

7. Ahri, Nine-Tailed Fox – Showcase, 303/298

Ahri Nine Tailed Fox Showcase card
Image credit: Riot Games

One thing you can’t tell just from digital images of Showcase cards is just how spectacular they look in person, with a textured foil finish to accompany the variant art on the card. They’re immediately striking not just for their incredible artwork, but also for the special treatment of the card itself.

6. Sett, The Boss – Showcase, 310/298

Sett The Boss Showcase card
Image credit: Riot Games

Fans of League of Legends have their own favorite Legends, and likely have their own preferred “skins” to use for their chosen characters too. With Riftbound’s alternate art utilizing different skins for each character, it cleverly evokes the feel of the game it’s based on through its artwork.

5. Kai’Sa, Daughter of the Void – Showcase, 299/298

Kai-Sa Daughter of the Void Showcase card
Image credit: Riot Games

The final Showcase card on our list of the most valuable cards in Riftbound: Origins, this marks Kai’Sa’s only appearance on the list too. It’s worth noting that, though each of these cards can be used in-game, given that all of the necessary stats and abilities are printed on the card, you’re unlikely to see these specific cards used in any decks, given their scarcity and value!

4. Leona, Radiant Dawn – Signature, 306*/298

Leona Radiant Dawn Signature Card
Image credit: Riot Games

With this Leona, Radiant Dawn card, we have the first Signature variant on this list. Adorned with the printed signature of the card’s artist, these specific variants are so rare that they’re estimated to be found in just 1 in every 700+ of Riftbound: Origins booster packs!

3. Ahri, Nine-Tailed Fox – Signature, 303*/298

Ahri Nine-Tailed Fox Signature Card
Image credit: Riot Games

Also classified as Overnumber cards, Signature cards bear the same card number as the Showcase card they’re a variant of, with the difference being the asterisk after the card number. So the Showcase variant of Ahri, Nine-Tailed Fox is card 303/298, whereas the Signature card is 303*/298.

2. Lee Sin, Blind Monk – Signature, 304*/298

Lee Sin Blind Monk Signature Card
Image credit: Riot Games

The layered foil, textured treatment on a Signature card is even more impressive than on a Showcase variant, with the signature itself being a textured addition to the card. There’s a real sense that Riot Games have gone all in with providing collectors real loot to chase with these cards, and that’s reflected in what’s currently very high, real world values for each one!

1. Jinx, Loose Cannon – Signature, 301*/298

Jinx Loose Cannon Signature Card
Image credit: Riot Games

In the top spot is one of the most popular characters in League of Legends overall: Jinx. Thanks partly to how heavily featured she is in the hugely popular, Netflix animated show, Arcane, it’s perhaps a surprise that none of her cards feature elsewhere on this list. That said, she was just outside the top 10, so if you do find yourself with a Jinx Showcase card, rather than the incredibly valuable Signature variant, you’ve definitely snagged yourself a very expensive card!

Honorable Mention: Ahri, Alluring – Launch Exclusive Promo, 066/298

Ahri Alluring Promo Card
Image credit: Riot Games

Given that this list is composed of cards you can find in Riftbound: Origins booster packs, we didn’t think it was quite right to include this Ahri Promo card in the list. You won’t find this card in booster packs, and instead will need to attend an event at which Riftbound has an official presence in order to get your hands on it. Value-wise, if we were to rank Ahri, Alluring, it’d currently sit between Leona and Kai’Sa on the above list, so it’s well worth tracking down if you can! A list of the events at which you can earn yourself an Ahri, Alluring card can be found here.

Check out our other Riftbound articles, such as our gallery of cards in the Origins set, and our guide to getting started with Riftbound.

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Jason Brown

Card Gamer's Creative Director, Jason has been a fan of both tabletop and digital gaming since the early 80s. He's been writing for more than 25 years, with bylines at Polygon, Nintendo Life, Retro Dodo, Lost in Cult and many more. He also regularly writes on a variety of geeky topics at his own website, midlifegamergeek.com.

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