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Let me stand next to your fire


It is now year two of Topps Fire and one year ago I would have been stunned if you told me there would be a year two of this product.

It's not that I hate the cards. The product is not for me, granted, but I just don't understand how something like this can sustain itself for an extended period of time. To me, explosive fireballs emerging behind star baseball players just screams "insert" or, at my most generous, "late 1990s issue." It doesn't say "staying power" to me.

However, this is also a guy who went to Target not once, but twice, to find some Topps Fire.

I can explain.

Maybe.

As weird as this product is and as much as I think this product resembles a mish-mash of Upper Deck X, the 1990s Metal Universe cards and Upper Deck Icons (the backs are about as pointless as I've ever seen), I find it intriguing.

I want to see the designs first-hand.

I'm a fan of bright cards and Fire is definitely bright. I also like art cards and these are those. And if the set is going to be "out there," then, yeah, I have to buy some just to see how far out.

I wouldn't be the father of a graphic design major if this stuff didn't interest me on some level.

So let's take a look at what Fire is about this year.




The base cards feature three different background designs like last year. But unlike last year, the designs are not nearly as distinctive. I came up with names for each individual design last year. I don't know if I can do it this year.

The first design -- the Stanton one -- looks like an explosion going off behind the player. Then there are those white streaks in the corner that look like the old-style Hollywood lights.

The second design, featuring Kingery, has even more going on. I think there's a weather map of a hurricane in the lower corner.

The third design defies description. But I think I see some eyes staring at me from behind Blyleven.

Here is a look at the cards I pulled separated by each design:




You know, even though the designs aren't as distinctive as last year, I think I like them more.

Like last year, Fire throws some parallels at you, some of them numbered, some of them not.


The gold parallels appear once a pack, except when a different parallel is inserted instead. I was lucky enough to get a Dodger in one of them. Cody Bellinger was the only Dodger to show up in the entire blaster. But he did show up twice.


This is some sort of red foil parallel (notice that the black-and-white portion of this design in the upper left corner has changed to red). It's not numbered, but it sure is purty.



This is one of two numbered cards I pulled. I believe it's an orange parallel? It's numbered to /299.



Here is something even more exclusive. It's some sort of purple thing (you'd think I'd do a little research before writing this post, you know?). It's numbered to /25. I think madding will be happy when this shows up in his mailbox. If he likes these things, that is.

Each blaster featured a separate pack of "gold-minted parallels," just as Fire did last year. I don't know if these are any different than the gold foil cards that pop up in the regular packs, but let's just go with it. I don't think we're supposed to think that hard about a product called "Fire".


One of my gold-minted cards was another Bellinger. So, this box was well-worth the cash.

As I said last year when I opened this product, there is no even ground with these cards. You either love them and think they're fresh and whatever else the young kids are saying, or you hate them and wonder why everyone dislikes green grass.

For me, it's a fun little detour from the usual product. But I won't buy any more of these unless they're Dodgers.

Like I said earlier, I can't believe Fire made it past its debut. The burning question is: will it make year three?

Comments

flywheels said…
I hated Fire last year and I too thought it would be one and done...but I have to say I like this year's effort. I've stuck to buying rack packs because I like the foil Blue Chip parallels. Interestingly enough too, all of the inserts I've pulled have been the Blue Chip parallels too. Hmm...
Old Cards said…
These cards do not "light my fire".
The font does nothing for me. Took me two full minutes to realize that "Kingery" wasn't "Hingery", some no-name call up who already got a card. Maybe I just need sleep.
I busted to blasters of Fire this week, and only pulled 2 Braves. Not worth the cost to me. I had to order the rest from cardbarrel minus the inciarte which I somehow missed on that go around.
Brett Alan said…
If the ridiculous "regular cards from flagship, but with snowflakes" set can reach year 2, anything can.
Nick said…
I'm planning a post on Topps Fire soon and I swear to god I was gonna use the same exact title for it. (Your opinions on the set don't differ much from mine, either.) Guess it's off to the drawing board again...
GCA said…
These are inserts - they're called Legends in the Making, just with an opposite colored background...same basic concept though. Stars and rookies on splashy backgrounds.

Though I will give them credit. I like these designs a little better than last year too. Maybe in a couple years they'll be nice enough that I will actually buy some.
Jeremya1um said…
Those things are just too much. I guess Topps figures it can put out whatever and people will buy it. I figured the set would only get a year, and honestly, I totally forgot about last years set until reading this post. Glad you pulled the Bellinger.
Mark Hoyle said…
Broken record here. I just grabbed my team set and called it done. Don’t do much for me either way. Just grab the Redsox and be done
RAZ said…
I don't know if I paid much attention to Fire last year, but I've bought a lot of it this year. It's a fun product, and I enjoy opening the packs and flipping through the cards. I started collecting in the 1990's, so maybe I feel a bit more nostalgia for this kind of thing than some of the crustier dudes above me in the comments.
Fuji said…
When I first saw Topps Fire back in 2015 (they had these 5x7 online exclusive sets), I really liked it. Ended up grabbing one for my collection, but it's has definitely lost its luster. As a collector, I'd keep any that were given to me in care packages, but I don't think I'd ever go out of my way to buy this stuff unless it was dirt cheap.
Fred Pike said…
Love the line from a Jimi Hendrix song. Not much love for the cards.
Jongudmund said…
These cards are hilarious. I don't blame you for not doing the research. You've suffered enough!
acrackedbat said…
i accidentally assembled a set, only short three cards. figures topps would pick FIRE to properly collate. three hobby boxes of heritage left me with half a set. burns my hide.