Flesh and Blood: Booster Boxes
Skip to Main Content
via email or telephone
weekdays before 2pm
of trading card games
via email or telephone
weekdays before 2pm
of trading card games
Booster boxes for Flesh and Blood TCG are the primary way to expand your collection of the hugely popular collectible card game. With every new quarter of the year arrives a brand new set release for FaB TCG, bringing a booster box of over 100 of the latest cards and hero support.
Each Flesh and Blood booster box arrives as a sealed display unit with 24 booster packs of cards, with each booster pack offering you a chance to collect rare and valuable cards.
Looking to increase your odds of a high-value hit? Pick up a Flesh and Blood sealed case to boost your odds of acquiring a Legendary card.
Curious to learn how to play? Pick up one of the many blitz decks instead.
Check out the complete collection of Flesh and Blood TCG here at Gathering Games.
The Hunted Booster Box: Return to the Dynasty in The Hunted, the latest set with support for Royal Draconic Ninja, Royal Draconic Warrior and Assassin classes, each with new heroes for blitz and classic constructed (Cindra, Fang and ???). 265 card set. Designed for booster draft/sealed.
Rosetta Booster Box: For the first time, Flesh and Blood has an all-arcane set with support for wizards and runeblades in what is arguably the best limited/draft environment created for the trading card game. Earth and Lightning return with a total of four new heroes: Florian, Verdance, Aurora, and Oscilio. 258 card set. Designed for booster draft/sealed.
Part The Mistveil Booster Box: Misteria is the East Asian-inspired setting of this set, with support for assassins, illusionists and ninjas, each with new heroes for blitz and classic constructed (Nuu, Enigma and Zen). 239 card set. Designed for booster draft/sealed.
Heavy Hitters Booster Box: A deathmatch in the Arena begins in Heavy Hitters, with support for brutes, warriors and guardians, including six new heroes for blitz and classic constructed: Kayo, Rhinar, Betsy, Victor Goldmane, Kassai and Olympia. 255 card set. Designed for booster draft/sealed.
Bright Lights Booster Box: Metrix is the neon-streaked city at the centre of this all-mechanologist set with three brand new heroes: Dash I/O, Maxx 'The Hype' Nitro and Teklovossen. 251 card set. Designed for booster draft/sealed.
History Pack 1 Booster Box: This reprint set contains many of the staple cards from the first three sets of Fab TCG and is a great starting point for anyone new to Flesh and Blood. 427 card set. Although it isn’t designed for booster draft/sealed, it is a great experience, nonetheless, for cracking packs and building decks.
Deciding on a booster box will most likely depend on which heroes and classes you like the most. Each set contains a handful of heroes and classes that it provides support for. If one of these appeals to you, then that booster box will probably be the best option for you.
While most players will pick up booster boxes to build constructed format decks (either classic constructed or blitz), the limited formats (also known as booster draft or sealed deck) are also a very popular way to play with boosters. Most booster boxes of Flesh and Blood support this format, but not all do. The following all support limited formats: Monarch, Tales of Aria, Uprising, Outsiders, Bright Lights, Heavy Hitters, Part The Mistveil, Rosetta and The Hunted. The sets that are not compatible with the limited formats include History Pack 1, Everfest, Dynasty, and Dusk Till Dawn.
The highest-value cards in most Flesh and Blood booster boxes come from the Legendary/Marvel rarity cards. The rough odds of this are 1 in 4 booster boxes or roughly 1 in every sealed case (i.e. four booster boxes). Hence, it often works out better for value to purchase a sealed case of Flesh and Blood. This offers a better chance of pulling one of the most valuable cards in the set.
The booster pack remains the centre of the appeal of trading card games, and it is no exception with Flesh and Blood TCG. The excitement of cracking packs and deck building is unparalleled, and Flesh and Blood proudly continues that tradition while setting an example of how best to run a trading card game.
While a strong argument has existed to ‘buy singles’ for most trading card games, Flesh and Blood TCG is one of the only collectible card games available on the market that actually has an estimated value (EV - the value of the contents of a booster box) that is above the general market price for the product. In other words, there’s a high chance that opening a booster box will result in acquiring more value from the price of the single cards from the booster box.
Combined with the joy of booster draft and sealed deck, Flesh and Blood has one of the largest reasons to buy sealed products compared to any other card game on the market.
Most Flesh and Blood boosters contain 16 cards with a minimum of 1 Rare card or a card of higher rarity (i.e. Mystic, Legendary or Marvel card).
Some sets of Flesh and Blood (such as Dusk Till Dawn and Everfest) are considered ‘expansion’ sets and contain 10 cards per pack, with 1 card guaranteed to be of Rare or higher rarity (i.e. Mystic, Legendary or Marvel card).
Although Legend Story Studios do not print ‘1st Edition” booster boxes anymore, there is a surefire way to identify 1st Edition cards from their ‘Unlimited’ counterparts.
In Welcome to Rathe and Arcane Rising, 1st Edition cards had no rarity circle in the bottom left of the card. The Unlimited versions of these cards introduced a solid coloured dot to represent the card’s rarity.
In Crucible of War, Monarch and Tales of Aria, 1st Edition cards had a solid coloured dot to represent rarity. The Unlimited versions of these sets used a small coloured ring to represent the card’s rarity.
Everfest only had a 1st Edition printing, which had a solid coloured dot to represent the card’s rarity. This was the final set to receive a 1st Edition print.
There are usually 24 booster packs in a booster box of Flesh and Blood TCG.
History Packs are the reprint sets of Flesh and Blood TCG, where three sets are usually combined into a mega-set. This is usually made available once older sets go out of print. You can recognise History Pack cards from their white borders. History Pack 1 is available in all regions and languages supported by FaB. History Pack 2 is only currently available in non-English territories and languages.