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BGS Black Label Goku Fusion World Sells for $23K
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BGS Black Label Goku Fusion World Sells for $23K

Goldin’s $23,180 sale of a Pop 1 BGS Black Label 2025 Fusion World Son Goku alt art offers an early benchmark for Dragon Ball Super high-end cards.

Mar 16, 20268 min read
2025 Dragon Ball Super Fusion World Manga Booster 01 Super Alternate Art Secret Rare #FB05-119 Son Goku - BGS PRISTINE/Black Label 10 - Pop 1

Sold Card

2025 Dragon Ball Super Fusion World Manga Booster 01 Super Alternate Art Secret Rare #FB05-119 Son Goku - BGS PRISTINE/Black Label 10 - Pop 1

Sale Price

$23,180.00

Platform

Goldin

2025 Dragon Ball Super Fusion World Son Goku Black Label Sells for $23,180

On March 16, 2026, a major ultra‑modern Dragon Ball Super card quietly set a new benchmark at Goldin. A 2025 Dragon Ball Super Fusion World Manga Booster 01 Super Alternate Art Secret Rare #FB05-119 Son Goku, graded BGS Pristine/Black Label 10 and noted as Pop 1, sold for $23,180.

For Dragon Ball and TCG collectors, this is a useful data point in understanding where early Fusion World chase cards are starting to settle in the graded, high‑end market.

The card at a glance

  • Character: Son Goku (Dragon Ball franchise)
  • Year: 2025
  • TCG: Dragon Ball Super Fusion World
  • Product: Manga Booster 01
  • Card number: #FB05-119
  • Rarity / type: Super Alternate Art Secret Rare
  • Grading company: Beckett Grading Services (BGS)
  • Grade: Pristine/Black Label 10
  • Population: Pop 1 (only copy with this grade in the BGS population report)
  • Auction house: Goldin
  • Sale date (UTC): 2026-03-16
  • Sale price: $23,180

“Super Alternate Art Secret Rare” sits at the top of the Fusion World chase pyramid for many collectors. It combines the premium rarity level (Secret Rare) with an alternate art treatment that leans heavily into manga‑style artwork, which is especially appealing to long‑time Dragon Ball fans.

The BGS Black Label 10 is Beckett’s highest possible grade, requiring a 10 subgrade on centering, corners, edges, and surface. It’s significantly tougher to achieve than a standard Gem Mint 9.5 or even a regular BGS 10, and that difficulty is reflected in both the Pop 1 status and the realized price.

Why this sale matters

Early benchmarks for Fusion World high‑end

Dragon Ball Super Fusion World is a newer ruleset and product line built alongside the existing Dragon Ball Super Card Game. Its early high‑end singles are still in the price‑discovery stage.

This Goldin result gives collectors and small sellers a reference point for what a true top‑of‑the‑pyramid Fusion World card can command when:

  • It’s a marquee character (Goku).
  • It’s a premier rarity tier (Super Alt Art Secret Rare).
  • It carries a perfect Black Label grade.
  • It has a population of one at that grade.

In hobby terms, “comps” are comparable recent sales used to frame price expectations. Because this is a Pop 1 Black Label and a relatively fresh 2025 release, there are very few truly clean comps.

Market context and related sales

Data for this exact card, in this exact grade, is extremely limited right now. Instead of guessing, it’s more useful to look at patterns from related areas:

  1. Same card, lower grades:

    • Early sightings from public marketplaces suggest raw (ungraded) or PSA 9 / BGS 9.5 copies of Fusion World Secret Rares and top alternate arts can land in the low‑ to mid‑hundreds of dollars once initial release hype cools.
    • Premium alternate arts of Goku across Dragon Ball products have historically clustered in that range before any significant grading premium is added.
  2. Other Dragon Ball Black Labels:

    • High‑end Black Label Goku and iconic villain cards from earlier Dragon Ball Super sets have previously sold from the high hundreds into the low‑five‑figure range, depending on character, artwork, and set importance.
    • Pop 1 or very low‑pop Black Labels with strong art and story relevance tend to sit at the top of that band.
  3. Ultra‑modern anime TCGs more broadly:

    • Similar dynamics have been seen in Pokémon, One Piece, and other licensed anime TCGs: iconic characters, low‑print chase tiers, and perfect grades often create an outsized price gap between the best copy and the rest of the population.

Within that lens, a $23,180 result for a Pop 1 Black Label Goku Super Alternate Art Secret Rare reads as a premium but understandable outlier: this is not a typical price for the card in general; it’s the price for the single best‑graded example currently known.

Because Fusion World Manga Booster 01 is still relatively new, it’s too early to label this as a long‑term “record” in a meaningful way, but it is a clear early marker for high‑end Fusion World demand.

Why collectors care about this card

1. Goku as a flagship character

In character‑driven TCGs, certain characters function much like star players in sports:

  • Goku tends to be the default flagship for Dragon Ball, the way Pikachu or Charizard are for Pokémon.
  • Key Goku cards from important sets or eras often become the face of that product line for both players and collectors.

A top‑tier rarity Goku from a new ruleset/era like Fusion World has a natural built‑in audience among:

  • Long‑time DBZ / DBS fans crossing into TCG collecting.
  • TCG collectors who track iconic characters across multiple games.

2. Super Alternate Art Secret Rare status

“Secret Rare” in most modern sets is where rarity and design begin to target collectors more directly than players. Fusion World’s Super Alternate Art Secret Rares layer on:

  • Unique artwork not shared with the standard version.
  • Visual design that leans heavily into manga styling and dramatic composition.

This makes the card function both as a game piece and as a small premium art print. As Fusion World matures, these alternate arts are likely to be revisited as “era‑defining” chase cards for the set.

3. Ultra‑modern timing and scarcity

This card sits firmly in the ultra‑modern era (typically mid‑2010s onward), which usually means:

  • Better print quality on average.
  • Higher overall print runs than vintage.
  • But much higher grading expectations and competition.

Scarcity here is less about total copies printed and more about:

  • High‑end grading scarcity: Reaching Black Label 10 is statistically rare, even on clean ultra‑modern cards.
  • Population concentration: With a Pop 1 Black Label, anyone who specifically wants “the best graded copy available” has exactly one target.

The grading angle: what Pop 1 Black Label means

A “pop report” (population report) is the grading company’s public count of how many copies of a specific card exist at each grade.

For this Son Goku:

  • BGS shows a Pop 1 at Black Label 10.
  • There may be other 9.5s or standard 10s, but they are treated as separate populations.

Collectors who chase “true 10s” often focus on the highest‑grade line in the pop report. When that line is Pop 1, it introduces:

  • Exclusivity: Only one collector can own this particular top‑graded example at a time.
  • Price separation: The premium over PSA 10 or BGS 9.5 copies can be substantial, even if the visual difference is subtle.

This is especially true for character‑driven IPs where the demand base is global and not limited to traditional card hobbyists.

How this sale fits into the broader Dragon Ball market

Dragon Ball cards have been building a more defined high‑end segment over the last few years. A few visible shifts support results like this one:

  • Cross‑collecting: Anime figure, statue, and manga collectors have been increasingly comfortable moving into cards, especially for display‑friendly alternate arts.
  • Consolidation around key characters: Goku, Vegeta, Gohan, and major villains tend to draw the most sustained demand, especially when paired with strong art.
  • Recognition of grading tiers: The difference between a near‑mint raw copy and a Black Label is better understood than it was even five years ago, especially among newer collectors.

In that broader context, a five‑figure hammer price for a top‑tier Goku Black Label from a new set doesn’t exist in a vacuum; it lines up with how other anime TCGs have behaved as their high‑end segments mature.

What this might mean for collectors and small sellers

This Goldin sale is useful as price context, not as a prediction.

Some practical takeaways:

  1. Raw and standard‑grade copies live in a different universe.

    • A raw or PSA 9 version of this card will not track anywhere near $23,180.
    • When reviewing comps, always filter by both card and grade.
  2. Condition still matters, even in ultra‑modern.

    • Pulling a Secret Rare isn’t the end of the journey if you care about value; surface scratches, minor edge wear, or print lines will usually cap your grade.
  3. Pop reports are worth checking.

    • Before sending in additional copies of Fusion World chase cards, looking at the current PSA and BGS pop reports can give a rough sense of competition at each grade level.
  4. Auction house vs. peer‑to‑peer sales.

    • A high‑end card selling through a major auction house like Goldin will often present a different result than a quick private deal or local sale. Audience, timing, and marketing all matter.

None of this guarantees where prices will go next. But taken together, it suggests that Fusion World’s top‑tier Goku cards are now firmly on the radar of serious collectors, not just players or casual fans.

Key details to remember

  • Card: 2025 Dragon Ball Super Fusion World Manga Booster 01 Super Alternate Art Secret Rare #FB05-119 Son Goku
  • Grade: BGS Pristine/Black Label 10 (Pop 1)
  • Auction house: Goldin
  • Sale date (UTC): 2026-03-16
  • Realized price: $23,180

For Dragon Ball fans tracking Fusion World’s place in the broader hobby, this sale is an early, well‑documented milestone: a single, perfect Goku alternate art establishing what one collector was willing to pay for the best graded copy currently known.