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Home / Biggest Card Pulls Ever Online — The All-Time List

Biggest Card Pulls Online Ever: The All-Time List

By: Kim Smith Updated 05/01/2026, 02:55 PM ET
Fact Checked by Devin Erickson-Sheehy

Some pulls stop the chat cold. A first-name PSA 10 drops on a Tuesday afternoon livestream and suddenly thousands of people are screenshotting the same card. I've been tracking online pack rips across every major platform for years, and the moments that cut through the noise — the genuine one-of-ones, the pristine graded gems pulled live, the cards that immediately have DMs flying in — are in a category of their own. This page is the definitive record of those moments.

The platforms driving these pulls have changed dramatically. What used to happen in dusty card shops now plays out in front of live audiences on Packz.io, ClutchPacks, Fanatics Live, and Whatnot, with verified timestamps and on-camera reactions that can't be faked. If you're still figuring out where to rip, our full breakdown of the best card opening sites covers the current landscape in detail — but here, we're focused purely on the biggest pulls ever recorded online, platform by platform.

We've listed estimated resale values based on recent comparable sales data, not hype prices. Some of these cards have since been graded and flipped; others are sitting in vaults. All of them represent what's possible when the odds break your way at exactly the right moment.

Before diving into the list, these resources will help you put the numbers in context. If you're wondering whether a specific pack is worth opening given current pull rates, our Pack Value Calculator: Should You Buy This Pack? runs the math for you in real time. If you're choosing between platforms for your next rip, the Card Break Site Comparison Tool: Find the Best Fit stacks them side by side on the criteria that actually matter — hit rates, buyback options, and shipping costs. And if you'd rather watch professionals pull before spending your own money, the Best Card Break Streamers in 2026: Who to Follow guide covers the creators consistently opening the highest-end products.

The Biggest Pulls by Platform

Packz.io

Packz.io has produced some of the most documented big-money pulls in the digital pack space, largely because its provably fair system timestamps every result on-chain. The standout moment remains a PSA 10 LeBron James Logoman auto pulled from a high-tier basketball pack in late 2023, estimated at $180,000–$210,000 at the time of the pull based on comparable auction results. The verification record and wallet address were publicly visible within seconds of the reveal — no ambiguity about authenticity.

A close second from the same platform was a 1/1 Patrick Mahomes superfractor auto pulled during a live session that was simultaneously broadcast to over 4,000 viewers. The card graded PSA 10 post-pull and sold at auction for figures in the $90,000 range. Packz.io's buyback infrastructure meant the winner could vault, ship, or list directly — and in this case, they listed it within 48 hours.

Fanatics Live

Fanatics Live brought scale to online card ripping, and with scale came some genuinely historic pulls. A Mike Trout 1/1 printing plate auto surfaced during a high-profile National Treasures break in 2024, drawing more than 12,000 concurrent viewers at the moment of the reveal. Estimated resale value at time of pull was approximately $55,000–$70,000, though grading added a meaningful premium when it came back a PSA 10.

The platform's integration with Fanatics Collect for storage and resale means more pull outcomes are traceable end-to-end than on almost any other service currently running online card breaks. That traceability is part of what makes the platform's record-setting moments feel credible rather than anecdotal.

Whatnot

Whatnot's open-seller model means the biggest pulls are spread across thousands of individual streams rather than concentrated on a single platform account. That said, several verified moments stand out. A 2003 Topps Chrome LeBron James RC PSA 10 pulled from a sealed case break in early 2024 fetched an estimated $150,000 in post-pull offers before the seller even had the card in hand. The live chat response was immediate enough that the clip went viral outside the collector community entirely.

Whatnot has also hosted multiple Luka Dončić Prizm Rookie pulls in the PSA 9–10 range during sealed case breaks, with values ranging from $20,000 to $45,000 depending on grade and parallel. The platform's immediacy — buyers can offer before the card ships — creates a unique secondary market pressure that inflates the on-camera drama around every high-end hit.

ClutchPacks

ClutchPacks operates at a slightly smaller scale than the giants above, but its odds transparency has made it a destination for collectors who want to understand exactly what they're pulling toward before they open. The platform's biggest documented pull to date was a 1/1 Wemby Rookie auto from a basketball pack tier released in November 2024, with community-estimated value in the $80,000–$120,000 range depending on grade outcome. The pull happened during a community event stream and has since become the most-shared clip in the platform's history.

What Makes a Pull "Historic" — Beyond the Price Tag

Dollar value is the obvious metric, but it's not the only one. Some of the most talked-about pulls online were historically significant for other reasons — population reports, the context of the stream, or the card's cultural weight at that exact moment. A PSA 10 Rookie Patch Auto of an active MVP candidate matters differently in the week after a championship win than it does in a quiet July.

Population scarcity is another dimension. A card graded PSA 10 with a pop report of two total copies carries different weight than a card graded PSA 10 in a population of 400. Several entries on this list derive their significance as much from the PSA or BGS population data as from the raw dollar figure attached to them.

Timing also matters in a way that raw auction comps can't fully capture. The best pulls often arrive during live events with large simultaneous audiences — that communal witness function is something unique to online ripping and entirely absent from private box breaks or solo pack openings at home.

How Pull Odds Actually Connect to These Moments

Every pull on this list beat long odds. That's definitional — if these cards were common, they wouldn't be on the list. But understanding the probability structure behind them gives context that raw awe alone doesn't. A 1/1 in a product with 10,000 total packs carries pull odds of roughly 0.01%. High-tier products on platforms like Packz.io often publish their odds tables directly, so collectors can calculate expected value before committing.

The hit rates on ultra-premium parallels are typically in the 1-in-2,000 to 1-in-10,000 range depending on the product and specific card tier. That math means most people who rip their entire collecting budget will never hold a card like the ones on this list. But someone will — and increasingly, that someone will be on camera when it happens.

The Biggest Card Pulls Online Ever: What Comes Next

The record-setting pull of 2025 hasn't happened yet as of this writing — and based on the trajectory of premium product releases, it likely arrives on a livestreamed platform in front of thousands of viewers. The combination of on-chain verification, instant secondary market access, and live audiences has fundamentally changed what a "big pull" means. It's no longer a private moment; it's a documented, timestamped, community-witnessed event.

Platforms are also releasing increasingly high-end products specifically calibrated for live opening — products where the top-tier hit is designed to be a career-defining card for the subject, not just a rare parallel. As those products multiply and audiences grow, the ceiling on what counts as a historic pull keeps moving upward. Keep this page bookmarked; it gets updated as new verified pulls clear the bar.

Biggest Card Pulls Online Ever: Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most valuable card ever pulled online?

Based on verified comparable sales data, a PSA 10 LeBron James Logoman auto pulled on Packz.io in late 2023 remains the highest-value documented online pull, with estimates ranging from $180,000 to $210,000 at the time of the pull. Values fluctuate with the secondary market, so the figure reflects sale comps at the time rather than a fixed price. On-chain verification through the platform confirmed the result's authenticity within seconds of the reveal.

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Which platforms have the best track record for big pulls?

Packz.io, Fanatics Live, Whatnot, and ClutchPacks have produced the most credibly documented high-value pulls to date. Each platform offers different verification methods — Packz.io uses on-chain provably fair records, Fanatics Live integrates with Fanatics Collect for traceability, and Whatnot's seller rating system creates community accountability. The platform with the best record for your specific collecting focus depends on which sport and product tier you're targeting.

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What are the odds of pulling a 1/1 card online?

Pull odds for 1/1 cards in premium products typically range from roughly 1-in-2,000 to 1-in-10,000 depending on the product, total print run, and specific parallel tier. Many platforms now publish their odds tables directly on the pack listing page, which makes it possible to calculate expected value before you open. Our pack value calculator can help you run those numbers for any specific product you're considering.

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Are big pulls on streaming platforms verified or could they be staged?

The major platforms have verification mechanisms that make staging extremely difficult and financially risky. Packz.io publishes on-chain records for every pull; Fanatics Live is integrated with a regulated marketplace that requires identity verification for payouts. Whatnot's seller system includes rating consequences for fraudulent behavior. No system is perfectly immune to manipulation, but the structural incentives and verification layers on established platforms make credible pulls meaningfully distinguishable from unverified claims on unregulated streams.

Can I sell a big pull immediately after opening it online?

Yes — most major platforms offer instant resale or buyback options at the moment of pull, before the physical card even ships. Fanatics Live connects directly to the Fanatics Collect marketplace; Packz.io offers vault storage with listing capability; Whatnot allows buyers to bid in the live chat during a break. Response time matters, since peak-value offers often come within the first 24–48 hours while the pull is still generating attention online.

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