This concept is just perfect on Baseball Cards.
I would surely like to collect all Nickname cards, but these have an odd cheap/expensive binary dichotomy, sadly to say.
The first such cards I can recall were in Heritage sets, where they were deliberately super short printed. Of course, the lower the print run and higher the expense of a Heritage card, the happier most Heritage collectors seem to be. I always kinda wished Topps would have made up some obscure /5 only image variation in the product for all the superstars, so the Richie Rich collectors could all get even more extra frustrated out-bidding each other to try showing off a completed run of such cards.
So when the inaugural 2018 Topps Big League set appeared with a whole checklist of these cards, for cheap, I was quite pleased. I discussed the whole concept at that time, and even rustled up a jealousy-inducing image of a full set of 2018 Heritage Nicknames. A weird deal of Topps never quite deciding if they should make Nickname cards as parallels or inserts, one of the themes of that post, is still with us today. As are the existence of sometimes cheap, and other times expensive Nickname cards.
As you can probably tell, I prefer the cheap versions. Ultimately I didn't collect a full set of the '18 Big League cards; the Nifty Nine page I did decide to keep has a few clues as to the reason why:
Turns out, some nicknames are just kinda blah. Though they do usually make sense, as on the Molina card there.
And, even on this one -
That's from Big League's sophomore season in 2019. Which is amusing enough to keep, particularly as a collector of the Detroit Tigers, and Bubble Gum Cards, but the similar deal on the '18 Big League Rizzo card is kinda nudging me towards finding a better example.
The '19 Big League checklist delivered a solid keeper, one even maybe the high-rollers now consider wanting to own despite it being a card with probably > 5,000 copies and from a "Kids" set of cards. Something particularly true if they lust after the '18 Heritage Nickname RC, but can't find for sale anymore, unlike this gem:
That, along with the Judge card at the top of this post, is an example of one of the rare times I have deliberately inve$ted in Baseball Cards — I purposely bought extra copies of them for 75¢ or so on various COMC Black Friday sales. That has worked out well, on those two cards at least, as they head towards being actual "double digit" Baseball Cards, i.e. each are approaching a $10 price point. But as usual with such decisions, it has also been a failure with similar purchases of Ronald "Sabanero Soy" Acuña and Juan "Mercenary" Soto. No, wait, Soto's says "Juanjo" on the card. But each of those would cost me a dime or so in losses if I sold them now. So it goes, when you are a low roller.
The unfortunate thing about those Big League inserts is they were only done the first two years of the now departed product. In 2025 one could say Topps kept the old Opening Day / Big League concept rolling with the "Celebration" product, which straight re-used some Opening Day & Big League insert themes, but without any new Nickname cards. They also bailed on the concept of low price-point Baseball Cards "for the children" by only issuing it in $60 ~ $70 "mega" boxes that all sold out instantly in retail stores, at least where I live. So it always goes in this often infernal Hobby.
Anyhow one reason Big League probably dropped the concept is that MLB dropped the concept that largely fed the creation of these cards - the "Player's Weekend" of games with special uniforms with the Nickname on the back, as seen on all the cards in this post so far.
It was never easy for Topps to get the actual nickname on the uni on to the Baseball Card -
That is my 2nd Topps Now card, one I still only partially own as it remains at COMC for now. That one came from a whole Player's Weekend checklist in 2018 when that whole deal got rolling; I don't know if the Topps Now line might have repeated the exercise in 2019. I kind of don't want to find out, because I like Nickname cards, but I don't like deliberately short printed cards that cost an Andrew Jackson, each, or even multiple Old Hickories, or even Benjamin Franklins, as with the Heritage cards.
My first Topps Now card also came from that checklist, for Walker "Ferris" Buehler, which made for a fun card, but I am finding it unlikely to put together even a single Nifty Nine page for Buehler, as Pitcher career arcs are just depressing, these days.
Once the fun flair of "Player's Weekend" was replaced by "City Connect" uniforms, Nicknames became an uncommon sight on Topps cards, although the Archives product dabbled in them in 2020:
and again from way downtown / on the back, in 2021:
which is cut/pasted from this -
That particular iteration of this concept was particularly disappointing for me for multiple reasons, despite the surprise addition (i.e. not used originally) of Nicknames to the re-use of the "Topps Big" design from the late 80s. Sadly in classic lazy man fashion, Topps skipped creating new cartoons on the back of the cards, for one, but they also wrecked the fronts by making them "foil" cards which then largely obliterated the In Action photo used as a backdrop on the classic two image style front of the card. So, no front scan to memorialize that set of bad decisions; sorry, not sorry, for such a sorry effort.
Meanwhile along the way I didn't really keep track of Heritage keeping the concept going; perhaps it has been an annual tradition since those 2018 cards, perhaps not. Another don't-wanna-know deal, essentially.
I do however know Nickname cards were part of 2024 Heritage, because when I saw the images of a few, the inevitable Desire that rules all Baseball Card collectors started growing again.
Heritage still has that not-quite-an-insert, not-quite-a-parallel checklist confusion the first Big League cards had. That's because they use regular card backs with the same regular card number. Which is only a problem when you want to shop for the cards on COMC, where they become listed as card#.2, all mixed in with those dumb base cards nobody actually wants any more.
Perhaps that's just more better-not-to-know angle to these, I guess, not seeing a whole checklist of them at once. I really doubt I will ever own "The Martian" card since it is for a Yankees Rookie Card card, sigh.
But along the way last year I stumbled across a card image of another current Yankee, and not a Rookie Card card, and not even a 10-time All-Star MVP player either — one who is just, gasp, Very Good, and thus not on the GOAT track to Cooperstown, all of which (usually) means not very expensive Baseball Cards.
These Nickname cards seem, to me, like they would be absolutely essential for any Player Collection in particular; a big reason I detest the super low print runs of them in Heritage as Topps caters to the people buying cases of product rather than those of us who only buy one box at a time.
Nevertheless, I persisted. Recently, after declining on several Andrew Jackson+ copies scrolling through my Baseball Card "feed" on eBay (I am so hungry), a seller finally threw in the towel and just cut the price of one of these down to just "single digit" territory, so I instantly mashed the button. Because I have yet another casual Player Collection going for a player who seemingly has a Nickname printed on all of his Baseball Cards, anyway. What I know for sure is, this one will be just exactly perfect on his eventual Nifty Nine page: