#afflink #advertising When you click on links to various merchants in this video description and make a purchase, this can result in this channel earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network. Tune in as Mrs. Wax Pack Gods reads about 1984 Fleer Baseball Cards. ▶SUBSCRIBE NOW! - http://bit.ly/WaxPackGodsYTSub If you had asked most collectors that spring, 1984 Fleer baseball cards entered the new hobby season in third place. All these years later, not too much has changed … but it sort of has. We all knew right out of the gate that Donruss had upped their game, and that Topps was trying to duplicate their picture-in-picture magic from 1983. But Fleer? It was just sort of there — clean and bright, but not really special. Of course, Don Mattingly‘s emergence that summer coupled with the scarcity of Donruss to build a hobby classic and change how we all looked at rookie cards, particular those of young up-and-comers. 1984 Fleer baseball cards unopened wax pack Donnie Baseball’s Topps and Fleer RCs got pulled along for the ride to some degree, and then the debut Fleer Update set changed things again that fall. With first cards of Dwight Gooden, Roger Clemens, and Kirby Puckett, that little set caught on quick, but we learned even more quickly that it was hard to find. Up went prices, and that helped boost the value of the base set, too, for awhile, at least. These days, 1984 Fleer and Topps are roughly equivalent in the market, and your preference largely depends on aesthetics and a few wins in card choices by one company or the other. https://WaxPackGods.com https://waxpackgods.com/1984-fleer-ba... / waxpackgods