By game2026-07-07

Flesh and Blood card size

Flesh and Blood card size

A Flesh and Blood card measures 63x88mm, with a card thickness of 0.305mm. That's the "standard" trading card size, the same one used by Magic: The Gathering, Pokemon, One Piece Card Game, and Disney Lorcana. Any sleeve, toploader, or binder page built for those games fits Flesh and Blood without adjustment.

Why the size question keeps coming up

Flesh and Blood is younger than Magic or Pokemon, and new players searching for gear often assume a newer game means different specs. It doesn't. There's no special Flesh and Blood dimension, no oversized hero cards in constructed play, nothing that breaks from the standard footprint. If a product page lists "standard size" rather than a game name, it's built for Flesh and Blood cards too.

That distinction matters because Japanese-size sleeves, the ones cut for Yu-Gi-Oh and Cardfight!! Vanguard, run smaller and tighter at 59x86mm for the card itself. Force a Flesh and Blood card into one of those and it creases at the corners or won't seat flat. Our guide on whether all TCG cards are the same size covers the two-size split in more depth, but the short version: check the packaging for "standard," not the brand name.

Sleeves and inner sleeves

Outer sleeves cut for standard cards run around 66x91mm across Dragon Shield's Matte and Classic lines, Ultimate Guard's Katana, Gamegenic's Prime, and KMC's Hyper Mat. That's enough clearance to slide a bare card in without snagging the seams on every draw step. Flesh and Blood decks get shuffled hard and often, since a match can run through the deck more than once with rummage and recursion effects, so a sleeve that's the right size and holds up to repeated handling matters more here than in slower formats. Our sleeve size chart lists the full range by brand if you want to compare beyond the usual three.

If you're double sleeving, an inner sleeve goes on first, and those run tighter, around 64x89mm, close enough to the card that it doesn't rattle inside the outer layer. Tournament Flesh and Blood, like tournament Magic, calls for opaque-backed sleeves so cards can't be identified by feel, and most competitive players run inner plus outer for exactly that shuffling reason.

Toploaders for pitch and chase cards

A raw or lightly sleeved Flesh and Blood card fits a 35pt toploader, interior 69.9x98.4mm, the standard entry point before sizing up for anything bulkier. Cold foils and rainbow foils don't need a different toploader just because they're valuable. Nothing in our data shows meaningful thickness variance by rarity for this game the way it shows up in some Pokemon products, so we wouldn't pay extra for a "premium" toploader over a basic 35pt unless you're stacking more than one card in it.

Binders work the same way. A standard 9-pocket page is cut for a 63x88mm card, and a Flesh and Blood collection slots into any binder built for Magic or Pokemon with no gaps or overhang.

Table

ItemSize (mm)Size (in)
Flesh and Blood card63x882.48 x 3.46
Standard outer sleeve (typical)66x912.60 x 3.58
Standard inner sleeve (Perfect Fit style)64x892.52 x 3.50
35pt toploader (interior)69.9x98.42.75 x 3.87

Quick answers

Do Flesh and Blood cards need special sleeves? No. Look for "standard size" sleeves, the same ones used for Magic and Pokemon. There's no Flesh and Blood-specific sizing.

Are Flesh and Blood hero cards bigger than other cards? Not in constructed play. Every legal card, hero included, is cut to the same 63x88mm standard.

Will a Japanese-size sleeve fit a Flesh and Blood card? It shouldn't. Japanese-size sleeves are cut for the smaller 59x86mm card used by Yu-Gi-Oh and Cardfight!! Vanguard, and a standard card will bind against the shorter edges.

What toploader should I buy for a single chase card? A 35pt is enough for one card, sleeved or raw. Save the thicker pt options for stacks or double-sleeved cards, not single-card storage.

Flesh and Blood earns its own search traffic because it's newer and players aren't sure yet, but the honest answer keeps being the boring one. It's a standard-size game, so standard-size gear from our sleeve directory or toploader directory works without a second thought. Save the research time for the question that actually varies deck to deck: whether a specific box closes on your double-sleeved stack. Run that one through the fit checker instead of guessing.

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