This is the English edition of a news article originally written in German. The reporting and editorial voice are ours — the translation was produced with AI assistance and reviewed by a human editor. Spotted an inaccuracy or an awkward line? Let us know via the contact page. The German original is linked at the top of this article.
Cardmarket wants to know which new card games should land on the platform next. If you’ve been waiting on the Cyberpunk TCG, give this a minute. Europe’s biggest TCG marketplace put out a short, anonymous survey on June 15, and it’s mostly aimed at sellers: which games would you like to see that aren’t on Cardmarket yet?
Why care? In Europe, Cardmarket is the place for singles. Land a listing there and you’ve got a real secondary market behind you. Prices in euros, sellers sitting in the EU, no customs headache on US imports. A physical-only TCG like Cyberpunk is missing that entirely right now, even though the game pulled in roughly $27 million on Kickstarter as the highest-funded game campaign of all time.
What Cardmarket is actually asking
The survey keeps it short. Cardmarket says it wants to gauge interest in a handful of TCGs that aren’t on the platform, both current titles and upcoming ones. The Cyberpunk TCG? It lands squarely in that second bucket, if you ask me. No release yet, the record campaign just wrapped. Textbook „upcoming.“
Does Cyberpunk already sit in the form as a ready-made checkbox? Can’t tell from the outside. The public announcement doesn’t name a single concrete game, so which titles made the list isn’t visible from where we’re standing. So I’ll skip the grand promises and hand you the plain version: take the survey, and anywhere you can register or write in interest for a game, put down the Cyberpunk TCG. More voices from the scene, stronger signal toward a listing.
Now the cold shower, because I won’t lie to you. Cardmarket already said it flat out during an earlier round of this same new-games question: a survey on its own won’t bring any game to the platform. It’s one factor among several. They also weigh what big sellers and distributors report, how comparable games actually move, what the whole thing costs them internally, and sometimes they go straight to the publishers. So your voice counts. It just isn’t a button that drags the game in by itself. It nudges the odds. That’s the honest size of it.
And still, why leave the opening sitting there? Part of the community still side-eyes the Cyberpunk TCG (record haul or not), and that’s exactly why a clear „yes, we want to trade this here“ is the strongest argument you can hand Cardmarket. Demand beats a gut feeling every time.
What you can do right now
Head to the Cardmarket news page, find the „Survey to Evaluate Future Games for Cardmarket,“ and fill it out. Anonymous, under five minutes. If you sell yourself, even better, because Cardmarket clearly weighs what the sellers say. Then spread it around: your Discord, your playgroups, the folks at your local store. The more choombas drop their voice, the harder it gets for Cardmarket to look past Cyberpunk.
Here’s my take. A game without a secondary market has only half arrived in Europe. If you ever want to buy and sell your Johnny Silverhand chase cleanly in euros, instead of routing through US platforms and customs every time, this survey is the lever you’ve got. Preem.
Sources: Cardmarket — Survey to Evaluate Future Games for Cardmarket · Cardmarket — Results of the New Games Survey · The Official Cyberpunk Trading Card Game — Kickstarter
Said Benadjemia – online als „Kenearos“. Cyberpunk-Fan seit dem ersten Trailer 2012, Night-City-Legend-Backer der Cyberpunk-TCG-Kickstarter-Kampagne 2026. Schreibt hier auf Deutsch alles rund ums Cyberpunk Trading Card Game von WeirdCo und CD Projekt Red – Kickstarter-News, Deep Dives zu Mechanik und Lore, Charakterguides, Strategieartikel.





