Topps Launch Day Sale for GPK Battle of the Bands Green Day

2024 Garbage Pail Kids Battle of the Bands Green Day is set to officially release this Wednesday, 8/27. Like with the 40th Anniversary release, Topps is planning on selling boxes via their website on Wednesday. Topps today updated both the landing page for the set, and their Twitter account to announced the boxes would go on sale 8/27 at 11:00 AM EST. This is a change for what the company had posted the past week on their website (1:00 PM). Topps Twitter also advertises boxes will remain at $79.99. One huge word of caution however, this info from Topps could be wrong, Topps did not follow what they posted for launch time and price on the 40th anniversary. So collectors should be leery about believing this info from Topps.

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GetAGrip’s GPK Mart Returning at Gross Card Con

Update 8/27: GetAGrip announced the final items as part of the Bukimi Meal. Rory McQueen did new artwork based off of an early Art Spigelman concept. The Drop Dead Ned will come as an autographed Deadwoodz figure, GPK card, and autographed card. There will also be auto and regular cards of the Spigelman concept artwork inside each meal. The package is now available to purchase from GetAGrip’s website for $199, with pickup only at Gross Card Con.

Update 8/26: GetAGrip announced two new items included in the Bukimi Meal. An oversized Adam Bomb poncho, and an Adam Bomb beanie.

Update: GetAGrip posted additional info on other items that can be found in the Bukimi Meal. A Cheap Toys 2 promo pack, featuring stinky salmon and toxic glow versions of the John Poind script will come in each box. Collectors will also receive one of four sapphire GPK rings, with a 1/1 Gold Adam Bomb ring a possibility.

Attention GPK Mart shoppers! GetAGrip is returning to this year’s Gross Card Con, and with it the return of the GPK Mart. Collectors will once again get a chance to pick up a fun package of officially licensed Garbage Pail Kids merchandise. This year the company is selling the Bukimi Meal. Inside the Happy Meal looking box, collectors will find a 12 oz Bukimi collector cup, and a John Pound GPK Style Sheet food tray with matching coaster. Bukimi Meals will be limited to /100 packages. No price has been released by the company. Much like last year’s GPK Meal, these will go on sale early, with pickup only at Gross Card Con. The company will not be shipping these. The only way to get them is to pickup in person at the show. The sale will launch this Wednesday, 8/27, at 1:00 PM EST at GetAGrio’s website.

Gross Card Con Prepping for Vegas Return

Another Gross Card Con is nearly here! The largest regular gathering of Garbage Pail Kids artists and collectors is coming to Las Vegas. The event is returning to the Vegas strip after being held in downtown Las Vegas the past two times. This year’s convention is being held at the Ahern Convention Center on Sept. 20th & 21st. Gross Card Con will held inside the Pokekon Las Vegas.

The highlight of every Gross Card Con is the artist lineup. There is a good mix this year of returning and new artists to GCC. Headlining this year’s lineup is longtime final card artist, Smokin Joe McWilliams. Also returning to GCC is Rory McQueen, Jason Crosby, Chad Scheres, and David Acevedo. Joining them is popular sketch artist Mike Stephens and former sketch artist Pat Chaimuang. Mark Pingitore from Magic Marker Inc rounds out the lineup of featured artists. Also returning this year is Topps Licensee, Get A Grip Skateboards. Misfits band member Dr. Chud, who wrote the music for the 30 Years of GPK documentary, will also have a table at the show. In addition, sketch artists Eddie Rhodes III, Shane Garvey, and former GPK artist Michael Barnard will have tables within the main show floor.

GPK & Wacky Warehouse will be at the show with all the GPK goodies you could ever need. Their LED prize wheel returns with a wide range of prizes include merchandise from Craniacs. The official show set will also be sold at their table. This year’s set features 13 cards done by the attending artists. All cards have a GPK x Pokémon theme to match the show atmosphere. Each set will also include two official Topps GPK promos done by artist Rory McQueen. Collectors have the chance of pulling sketch cards and redemptions for merchandise from GPK & Wacky Warehouse. There will also be a show t-shirt featuring various GPK characters and Dr. Chud, with artwork done by Jason Crosby.

GPK & Wacky Warehouse will also host a dinner Saturday night at Evil Pie pizza. Unfortunately, tickets for the dinner recently sold out. Anyone still wishing to attend should message Clint Coleman directly on Facebook to get on the waiting list. Collectors attending the dinner receive two show cards done by Pat Chaimuang and a Shrunken Head lanyard done by Chad Scheres. Collectors who can’t attend the dinner can purchase the lanyard at the show.

Sunday at the show will feature a one hour artist Q&A session hosted by GPKNews.com editor Jeff Rockholt. Time of the artist talk is still TBD.

The show will be open for general admission hours on 9/20 & 9/21 from 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM. Admission is $10 per day, tickets can be purchased from the show’s website in advance. Plan to attend now to meet some of your favorite artists and hang out with your fellow collectors!

PSA Celebrating 40th Anniversary of Garbage Pail Kids

PSA, the leading card grading company, is joining the 40th anniversary celebration of the Garbage Pail Kids. The company announced today that the October edition of PSA Magazine will feature GPK! Both the Sports Club and Non-Sports Club will feature different covers with artwork done by David Gross. Standard magazine subscribers ($149/year) will get a cover. Premium subscribers ($199/year) will also receive an officially licensed promo card, also done by David Gross. To receive one of these covers you must be join the club prior to 8/31/25.

More GPK Crossover in 2025 Dynamic Duals Baseball Set

Did you miss it? This one completely flew under the radar. Topps continues to use Garbage Pail Kids wherever they can in their sports releases. This year’s online only release of 2025 Topps MLB Dynamic Duals features a super short printed Garbage Pail Kids card. The Dead Ted/Cranky Frankie card numbered SP-2 is a part of the non-MLB insert set. The card is also available in an Orange /5 and Gold 1/1 parallel. Last year’s Dynamic Duals set featured a GPK card, Adam Bomb/Nasty Nick. This reason why you might have missed this one? It came out May 22, 2025!! Yes, nearly three months ago. Chalk this one up to Topps less than excellent marketing. The cards does not show up on the posted checklist by Topps, no odds were posted for the product either. No print run information is available for the product, but so far very few copies have shown up on eBay. This one looks to be very rare. It looks like GPK collectors will need to keep their eyes open on every sports set going forward!

More Details on 2024 GPK Battle of the Bands Green Day Set

After yesterday’s preorder on Topps’s website for 2024 Garbage Pail Kids Battle of the Bands Green Day, more information is starting to come out. Topps still has not posted odds yet on their website. However, various resellers are posting the Sell Sheet for the product. This means, much like 2025 Worst of GPK 40th Anniversary, that large online sellers and select Hobby shops should have access to order product directly from Topps. This might be the new standard distribution method for most packed out products.

Collectors will notice a whole lot of similarities on the structure of this set to the 40th Anniversary set. Each box comes with ten 5-card packs. Each box is should have at least two numbered parallel cards. The base set contains 100 cards, 50 new gags with a/b variations. There looks to be 10 parallels to collect. Collectors can find; Booger Green (Unnumbered), Crumpled Garbage Foil (Unnumbered), Black (/199), Blue /99), Green Foil (/75), Gold Crumpled Foil (/50), Orange Foil (/25), Black Shimmer Foil (/10), Red Foil (/5), and FoilFractor (1/1).

There are also a ton of Insert sets to find in the product. Insert sets include; B-Sides, Sweet Children, Tribute to the East Bay, Doolie: 30 Years, and Album Art. All inserts have eight different parallels to collect; Black (/199), Blue /99), Green Foil (/75), Gold Crumpled Foil (/50), Orange Foil (/25), Black Shimmer Foil (/10), Red Foil (/5), and FoilFractor (1/1). There are also two rare insert sets, American Idiot SPs and Standing Room Only that only have three parallel types; Black Shimmer Foil (/10), Red Foil (/5), and FoilFractor (1/1). Collectors can also find Triple Autos /25, American Idiot Triple Autos /5, Tour Relics, Auto Tour Relics, and Triple Auto Tour Relics. All autos and Relics also have a Foilfractor 1/1 version. There are no sketches in this release, and also no mention of printing plates.

You can checkout pictures of the Sell Sheet below. 2024 GPK Battle of the Bands Green Day is set to launch 8/27/25.

Topps Launches Preorder for 2024 GPK Battle of the Bands Green Day

After pushing the preorder back by a week, Topps today officially launched 2024 Garbage Pail Kids Battle of the Bands Green Day. Each box contains ten 5-card packs, while each case has 20 boxes. Looks to be a similar structure to other recent online packed out products. While the company did launch the preorder, they sadly didn’t reveal much else about the product. The checklist was released a week ago, but the odds still say “coming soon”. There was also no mention on what of any parallels there will be, how many inserts per pack/box/case, or how many base cards to expect. Boxes are available for $79.99 each, with a limit of 10 boxes. Cases were also available for $1599.99, with a 2 case limit. Cases however, sold out soon after the listing went online. As of this posting, boxes are still available for preorder. Collectors can get all the Dookie they can handle on Aug, 27,2025 when the set officially releases.

How Many 2025 Worst of GPK 40th Anniversary Cards Were Produced?

Collector’s heads might be spinning a bit after the latest GPK release, 2025 Worst of Garbage Pail Kids 40th Anniversary Edition. After more than a decade of massive overproduction of retail sets, Topps pulled a 180, with a much smaller print run. The product being Hobby only, coupled with a complete restructure of the set structure, puts this set in a whole new realm. Can production be compared to past sets? Is it bigger than recent online releases? Bigger than Sapphire? Let take a look and see just where the 40th anniversary set fits in.

First my disclaimer! Production numbers are never an exact science, and Topps makes it tough on us. In order to attempt to solve this riddle we need to look very closely at the clues in both the odds and the sell sheets. Some things to keep in mind for this post. 1) Topps doesn’t want the public to know exactly how much of each card was made. Why? No idea really, I think it’s dumb, but historically Topps only provides enough information to get close. 2) We need to make some assumptions. Those assumptions will be based on the clues we have, but still some guessing has to happen. 3) The odds never quite seem to come out completely equal. However, we can round and get pretty close to how much was produced. 4) Topps changes what is printed from what the sell sheet says all the time. This will throw off all our numbers. 5) Keep in mind Topps historically holds back up to 5% of the print run to cover missing hits, damaged cards, and their No Purchase Necessary program. These numbers would include that 5%. With all that in mind let’s get started…(Warning lots of math coming up. If you don’t want to read about the process, skip to the bottom for the answer sheet!)

Being a Hobby only release makes this exercise really easy. There is only one set of odds to deal with. As long as there is at least one numbered card type, and the odds Topps printed are correct, it’s a piece of cake. Luckily, Topps loves their parallels. For the most part, the odds do seem to be accurate based on case breaks, with a handful of exceptions we will go over below. We have a couple of dozen examples we can use to figure out total production. Let’s take a look at a few and see what that gives us.

  • Gold A Parallel – 100 cards in set * 50 made per card = 5,000 total Gold A * 42 odds = 210,000 total Hobby packs
  • Foilfractor A Parallel – 100 cards in set * 1 made per card = 100 total Foilfractor A * 2,101 odds = 210,100 total Hobby packs
  • C Cards Orange Parallel – 23 cards in set * 25 made per card = 575 total C Oranges * 365 odds = 209,875 total Hobby packs
  • Global Takeover Gold Parallel – 20 cards in set * 50 made per card = 1000 total Takeover Golds * 209 odds = 209,000 total Hobby packs

As I mentioned above, easy. All four of the numbers above are within 1,100 of each other. You can look at any of the other odds printed and come up with similar results. The variation is due to Topps rounding odds, but everything is really close. So, we are going to go with 210,000 total packs produced. That works out to 26,250 boxes, or 2,625 cases. We’ve never seen a retail set produced that small.

How do these numbers compare to recent releases? Let’s take a look at the most recent Chrome, Sapphire, retail, and online packed out release.

  • 40th Anniversary – 210,000
  • 2024 Sapphire – 45,000
  • Chrome 7 – 1,612,000
  • Valentine’s Day – 12,150
  • Kids At Play – 2,085,000

It’s kind of hilarious to look at the numbers above and compare recent releases. However, you can clearly see 40th anniversary is much, much less than the last retail releases, Chrome 7 and Kids At Play. However, the release is much bigger than online releases like Sapphire and Valentine’s Day. The big question going forward is, if Topps will continue this structure and production with the next retail release.

Now that we know the pack production we can review how many of the various inserts and parallels were made of each type. While the set has dozens of numbered card types, there are still a few we can look at.

Usually, base cards are saved for the end of the production articles. Since Topps flipped this set upside down, let’s do that here. It’s almost like the base cards are the “hits” in the product! Here’s our first mistake collectors found on the odds sheet. Base “a” name cards were listed as 1:1, however collectors have been pulling anywhere from 16-19 per box. It’s just over 2 per pack. From hands on experience, the majority of boxes have 17 per box. We will use 17 per box for our calculations. Let’s also look at the Short Print “b” name, and Super Short Print “c” name cards.

  • Base “a” cards – 17 per box * 26,250 boxes = 4,462 of each Base “a” card.
  • “B” Name SP – 210,000 packs / 2 odds = 105,000 total B cards / 100 in set =‘1,050 of each B card.
  • “C” Name SSP – 210,000 packs / 121 odds = 1,735 total C cards / 23 in set = 75 of each C card.

If you’re a set collector, you aren’t happy with these numbers. While 4000 base sets is possible, the actual number that gets made will be much, much less. Collectors wanting a base set might have a tougher time finding one. Want the short printed B name set? Well that one is very tough. Will take 4+ cases to just complete one b name set. How about C names? These are even rarer, according to the odds. However, it appears Topps found a way to make it impossible to collect a C set. After seeing results from 50+ cases, no base C name cards have surfaced. It looks like those didn’t make it into the product for some reason. Next, let’s look at the unnumbered parallels and common inserts.

  • Green Parallel – 210,000 packs / 1 odds sheet = 210,000 total green cards / 100 in set = 2,100 of each green parallel.
  • Crumpled Parallel – 210,000 packs / 120 odds sheet = 1,750 total Crumpled cards  / 100 in set = 17 of each Crumpled parallel.
  • Takeover/Eras Insert – 210,000 packs / 4 odds = 52,500 total Takeover/Eras cards / 20 in set = 2,625 of each Takeover/Eras cards.
  • Wacky Packages Insert – 210,000 packs / 8 odds = 26,250 total Wackys / 8 in set = 3,281 of each Wacky Packages card.

Based on what we’ve already seen, those numbers fall right in line as expected. Once again, not a huge number of insert sets out there. Set collectors are looking at one insert set in a full case. One thing that does stand out is how rare the Crumpled parallel is. At just 17 copies, those will be very tough for collectors to find. Now let’s look at the other inserts and autographs. 

  • Adam Bomb Homage – 210,000 packs / 40 odds = 5,250 total Homage cards / 40 cards in set = 131 of each Homage card
  • AB Homage Auto – 210,000 packs /  27 odds = 7,777 total Homage autos / 30 cards in set = 259 of each AB Homage Auto
  • Artist Auto – 210,000 packs / 108 odds = 1,944 total autos / 12 cards in set = 162 of each artist auto
  • OS Buybacks – 210,000 Hobby packs / 217 odds = 967 total OS Buybacks

Yes, you’re reading that right, it’s easier to pull an Adam Bomb Homage auto than it is to pull an Adam Bomb Homage insert card. Have you ever seen that before? There’s an easy explanation for this. With Topps guaranteeing an auto, sketch, or plate per box, they had to drastically raise the number of autos. 250 is a lot for a base auto. On the flip side, collectors will have a tough time putting together the regular AB Homage set with just over 100 of each available. The other strange thing on here is Buybacks. On the odds sheet Topps listed Buyback odds as 1:8. Topps confirmed with GPKNews that the odds for Buybacks and the GPK Yourself cards were inadvertently switched on the odds sheet. While Topps wouldn’t reveal which buybacks were inserted into the product, they told GPKNews it was a random assortment of OS cards. So far the ones surfaced have been stamped anywhere from 1/1 to #/7.

Worst of GPK 40th Anniversary is truly a set that might be the beginning of a new era for Garbage Pail Kids. After massively overproducing retail GPK sets for over a decade, it’s clear Topps sat down and made the decision to flip the brand on its head. How will this be received by collectors? So far due to the very limited print run, box prices are soaring. How will this set affect the brand? A limited production and high price point does not serve to bring new collectors into hobby. So the big questions is, what will Topps do going forward? We will have to wait until next year’s 2026 GPK Universe set to find out.

Finally, we usually end the production articles by looking at the most common card type in the retail sets, base cards. We covered base cards earlier, so we might as well look at the most common card in this set, GPK Yourself. As we mentioned above, Topps switched the odds on the GPK Yourself and Buyback cards. That means the real odds on the GPK Yourself contest cards is 1:8 or one per box. That means there are 26,250 total GPK Yourself cards out there! Plenty for everyone! Enter often, you might just find yourself as a Garbage Pail Kid in the next retail set. That is, if Topps can fix their code entry website…

Adam Bomb/Nasty Nick to Appear in 2025 Topps Shoebox Treasures

Once again some of the Garbage Pail Kids are invading a baseball set. Both Adam Bomb and Nasty Nick appear on the checklist for 2025 Topps Shoebox Treasures by Andy Friedman. The set, primarily baseball players, features all watercolor artwork from Andy Friedman. There are also a handful of non-sports subject including in the set, including GPK mainstays Adam Bomb and Nasty Nick. The Adam Bomb card is being used by Topps to promote the set. While Topps has released the checklist, they haven’t released odds yet. There a chance the cards will also be available in a number of parallels. The set also looks to be giving away the original paintings form the set, as both GPK characters also appear on the 1/1 Original Paintings checklist. No other details including pricing have been revealed yet by Topps. According to their website, the product will be an available Aug. 28, 2025.