Stature is back in the NHL lineup with a twist, folding two seasons into one elegant release. The 100-card base set is split evenly between 2023-24 and 2024-25, each side built the same way with 25 veterans, five legends and 20 rookies. That dual-year approach gives player collectors twice the runway while keeping the checklist tight enough to finish, and it preserves the brand’s minimalist, high-end look on thick stock.
Boxes are quick and purposeful. Each hobby box is one pack with five cards, built to deliver one autograph or memorabilia card, two serial-numbered parallels, one numbered rookie or legend, and one veteran on average. Cases land at 16 boxes, and release is tracking to September 17, 2025, a date that several distributors and retailers now list. The format suits breakers who like a guaranteed swing at ink or relics without wading through filler, and it makes singles hunting straightforward for team and player projects.
Parallels carry most of the color, and they keep to a simple ladder across both years of the base set. Green is numbered to 375, Red to 249, Orange to 199, Blue to 99, Gold to 50, Purple to 25 and Black to 10. With two of these non-auto or memorabilia parallels in every box, there is enough numbered content to reward targeted chasing without drowning the set in variations.
Autographs follow the same philosophy. Base autos fall one in three boxes across the product, with color tiers that mirror the non-auto run: Green to 199, Red to 99, Orange to 50, Blue to 25, Gold to 10, Purple to 5 and Black to 3. Patch and premium memorabilia autographs start at Auto Patch to 49, then Green to 35, Red to 25, Orange Premium to 15, Blue to 10, Gold to 5, Purple to 3 and a Black one of one at the top. It is an easy structure to learn and it keeps the chase focused on core names rather than sprawling inserts.
Relics stay in lockstep so the numbering language never changes. Patches are numbered to 49 with Green to 35 and Red to 25, while Premium Memorabilia runs Orange to 15, Blue to 10, Gold to 5, Purple to 3 and a Black one of one. Stature does not add extra themed inserts this year, which keeps attention on the base, the parallels and the hits that come directly out of that checklist.
Collectors who live in the details will appreciate that Stature even tells you what a typical five-card box looks like before you open it, down to the numbered rookie or legend that pairs with the veteran. For anyone planning a team break, a case, or a singles binge, that kind of predictability is gold because it makes value mapping clearer across a dual rookie class that spans two seasons without losing the brand’s clean identity.
Boxes are quick and purposeful. Each hobby box is one pack with five cards, built to deliver one autograph or memorabilia card, two serial-numbered parallels, one numbered rookie or legend, and one veteran on average. Cases land at 16 boxes, and release is tracking to September 17, 2025, a date that several distributors and retailers now list. The format suits breakers who like a guaranteed swing at ink or relics without wading through filler, and it makes singles hunting straightforward for team and player projects.
Parallels carry most of the color, and they keep to a simple ladder across both years of the base set. Green is numbered to 375, Red to 249, Orange to 199, Blue to 99, Gold to 50, Purple to 25 and Black to 10. With two of these non-auto or memorabilia parallels in every box, there is enough numbered content to reward targeted chasing without drowning the set in variations.
Autographs follow the same philosophy. Base autos fall one in three boxes across the product, with color tiers that mirror the non-auto run: Green to 199, Red to 99, Orange to 50, Blue to 25, Gold to 10, Purple to 5 and Black to 3. Patch and premium memorabilia autographs start at Auto Patch to 49, then Green to 35, Red to 25, Orange Premium to 15, Blue to 10, Gold to 5, Purple to 3 and a Black one of one at the top. It is an easy structure to learn and it keeps the chase focused on core names rather than sprawling inserts.
Relics stay in lockstep so the numbering language never changes. Patches are numbered to 49 with Green to 35 and Red to 25, while Premium Memorabilia runs Orange to 15, Blue to 10, Gold to 5, Purple to 3 and a Black one of one. Stature does not add extra themed inserts this year, which keeps attention on the base, the parallels and the hits that come directly out of that checklist.
Collectors who live in the details will appreciate that Stature even tells you what a typical five-card box looks like before you open it, down to the numbered rookie or legend that pairs with the veteran. For anyone planning a team break, a case, or a singles binge, that kind of predictability is gold because it makes value mapping clearer across a dual rookie class that spans two seasons without losing the brand’s clean identity.