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Cards Japan Wrestling

Collecting Spotlight: BBM Women’s Wrestling 2024 Card Set

BBM releases yearly card sets for a variety of sports, and for over a decade I have been collecting their joshi wrestling sets. Here we’ll take a look at the details and differences in their most recent offering.

Known as True Heart until 2020 and simply Women’s Wrestling since then, these yearly sets focus on women wrestlers all across Japan. Most joshi wrestling companies and freelancers participate. The main exception is World Wonder Ring Stardom, whose roster members do not appear in these sets (Stardom has done occasional card based products on their own in the past).

There are also rare special sets released in addition to the yearly sets, such as the recent 2023 Ambitious. As opposed to the general random nature of packs and boxes, Ambitious 2023 was a box only release. Each box contained a complete 47 card base set, one of nine possible acrylic standee cards, and a small number of random chase inserts and signature cards.

The standard packing numbers for the last several years of Women’s Wrestling releases have been 6 cards per pack, 20 packs per box. Each box had some chase cards in random packs, with the chase card replacing one of the base cards (so you’re always getting 6 cards in a pack).

This release dropped from 20 packs per box to 18, but increased the cards per pack to 7. The seventh card in each pack is a one of the 24 “Kira” chase cards, shiny cards which feature a facsimile auto of the depicted wrestler. It’s a solid move for BBM, as now each pack has something a little special in it.

The other chase subsets in the 2024 set are a 9 card foil subset, and 19 “secret” chase cards (18 base card secret variants plus a secret card for Nanashi (“no name”)). The base cards generally feature two images of the featured wrestler while the various inserts highlight a single pose, headshot, etc. There tends to be 3 foil and 3 secret cards per box.

An assortment of base cards from the 2024 set.

The yearly base set varies in size each year to reflect new wrestlers, retirements, occasional special cards for tag teams, and so on. There are a lot of joshi wrestlers active in Japan and these are not small sets. The 2024 base set consists of 156 cards, which is a little over a box and a half of base cards (if no duplicates were drawn).

One of the main draws of the sets are the special randomly included cards signed by the wrestlers. This year there are 3-4 sig cards per box.

Anecdotally, for several cases I’m aware of, there were exactly 3 boxes in the 12 box case that had 3 sig cards with the remainder having 4. So it seems like a pretty stable 75% of boxes have 4 sig cards and 25% have 3.

These autographed cards are numbered and there’s generally around 100 of each base version. The vast majority of the base sigs cards this year are on card signatures (with stickers only used for included wrestlers currently based overseas), which is great.

The base signature card design this year is very simple, but I personally like them a lot. The focus is firmly on the wrestler and their signature, and having a fair bit of white background on them makes the insert variants with fully colored backs contrast more.

The 2024 set has signed secret variant cards for the wrestlers who have secret base versions. These are limited/numbered to 90. The foil insert subset has associated signature cards numbered to 60 each.

There are also a small number of “super secret” signature cards. Aja Kong has one limited to 30 copies, while five other wrestlers have versions limited to 10.

Stickers were used for all of the insert autos, which isn’t ideal but is understandable as they’re going for a certain look with these and the stickers limit signatures to a confined area on the card. All of the various insert autos this year look stunning.

The last chase items to talk about are chekis: mini polaroids of the wrestlers signed and sometimes decorated by them. There are generally 10 for each wrestler who does them (not everyone in the base set does), with a few wrestlers doing different outfits and having a total of 20 this year.

In past years chekis were generally extremely stable pull rate-wise at 3 per case (or 1 per 4 boxes). This year it has dropped to 2 per case (1 in 6 boxes). While they are among the most rare inserts to try to collect, they’re wonderfully unique and a focus of my personal collection.

So that’s it for my breakdown of this year’s BBM Women’s Wrestling release. I wish anyone who decides to collect some of this fun set good luck with their pulls and pickups.

Categories
Japan Wrestling

Deathmatch Daisuki: Hikari Noa’s “Graduation” from TJPW

By the beginning of 2018 I had been to Japan a number of times, and Tokyo Joshi Pro-Wrestling (TJPW) had morphed from a curiosity that wasn’t really aimed at me into one of my favorite promotions.

Their big January 4th show that year opened with the quadruple debut of a wrestling subset of the idol group Up Up Girls, and included someone who would go on to be one of my absolute favorites in the promotion.

The original Up Up Girls lineup, Miu, Hikari, Raku, and Hinano, wrestled in identical gear outside of their signature color versions. They made a solid impression in a basic but fun debut match that hinted at a lot of potential for the group.

A year later the group would transition to new, more individualized gear and tweak their names. This is when Hikari became Hikari Noa, touches of her goth aesthetic were introduced into her outfit, and her unique personality and infectious charisma really started to show.

From the boisterous powerhouse Miu Watanabe, to the sleepy train otaku Raku, to the deathmatch loving Hikari Noa the Up Up Girls became more and more beloved by fans as they let themselves shine. As Pipipipi Pinano (the former Hinano) retired in April 2019, the Up Up Girls would continue as this trio until Shino Suzuki’s debut in 2023.

For me Hikari in particular was a breath of fresh air in wrestling. She took to it well, and evolved quickly in her early career consistently improving and finding her own style within the ring. She was engaging to watch, easy to cheer for, and eventually became one of TJPW’s most popular roster members.

I thoroughly enjoyed her matches, relishing in the opportunities I had to see her compete live against some of TJPW’s top stars. She was the ultimate underdog babyface to me, and I enthusiastically followed along with her progress and celebrated every victory.

In 2021 Hikari became the first Up Up Girl to win singles gold, defeating Yuki “Kamiyu” Kamifuku for the International Princess Championship. She held it from May until January with four successful defenses before losing it to former champion Maki Itoh.

“Deathmatch Daisuki” (“I love deathmatches”) Hikari Noa was true to herself in her wrestling goals, making it well known she intended to someday participate in the type of deathmatches that captured her imagination and attracted her to wrestling in the first place.

She was at the forefront of TJPW beginning to stretch beyond their norms. Her first ever hardcore match main evented TJPW’s first Inspiration show, a spin off concept for unique matches outside of TJPW’s core model. She put up a valiant fight against hardcore veteran Rina Yamashita in a great showing.

Hikari would get her ultimate wish in August 2021, participating in an Electric Current Deathmatch as part of an eight-person inter gender tag contest on a DDT show also featuring TJPW’s Maki Itoh on the other team. In 2023 she’d have a singles Fluorescent Lighttubes Deathmatch against Sawyer Wreck to headline Inspiration #6.

Deathmatches generally aren’t my thing, but I was thrilled that Hikari kept pushing her personal dreams and got to realize the ambitions that brought her into wrestling in the first place.

In September 2023 Hikari and her partner Nao Kakuta, collectively known as Free Wi-Fi, won the Princess Tag Team Championships.

The reign was unusually significant for Hikari, who had three other regular partners (Pinano, Sena Shiori, and Natsumi Maki) who either retired or left TJPW before the team could achieve championship success. For Nao, it was her first championship ever (and only, as she’ll be retiring this July).

Free Wi-Fi was an incredibly fun, skilled team and I was overjoyed to see them ascend to the top of TJPW’s tag division.

In late December 2023, shortly before Free Wi-Fi was set to defend the Princess Tag Team Championships at TJPW’s 1/4/2024 show, a press conference was held announcing they were vacating the titles.

Hikari was not at the press conference (her partner Nao Kakuta and TJPW founder Tetsuya Koda spoke). It was initially reported that she was out due to illness. In mid February TJPW and Up Up Girls management announced she was on indefinite hiatus “due to personal reasons.”

Finally in May it was announced that “after discussions with her about her future” Hikari had left TJPW and Up Up Girls (the general term Japanese companies use for someone leaving, whether retirement or otherwise, is “graduation”).

There would be no farewell appearance or show, and no social media statement from her. The company statement included a general apology from her about not being able to live up to waiting fans wishing for her to return. Hikari has not made any public appearances nor any social media posts since before the original press conference in December.

At this time no one is aware if she’ll ever return to wrestling or public life in general. I will not speculate nor discuss this beyond the above presentation of the public timeline, but of course it is a shame to see one of my favorite wrestlers ever leave the company under such abrupt, clouded circumstances. But whatever the case, I hope things are going well for her.

If this is the end of her wrestling career, it will have spanned over 350 matches across six years. While I’d love for her to return, I am deeply grateful for all the time and effort she spent entertaining fans regardless.

Hikari was always cheerful and appreciative when greeting fans, and I am blessed to have had to the opportunity to meet her a number of times. My thanks again for all the fun she added to wrestling.

I will miss her terribly, but more importantly whatever she does in the future I hope she’s happy and I wish her all the best.