Key Source & Overview

  • Topps’ official Dune Chrome page offers to Download checklist / Download odds for 2024 Dune Chrome. Topps

  • Checklist Insider has a detailed “2024 Topps Chrome Dune Checklist Guide” with base cards, parallels, autograph lists, etc. Checklist Insider

  • Topps’ Checklists page includes 2024 Topps Dune Chrome among the set checklists. Topps

  • Topps’ “2024 Dune Chrome Hobby Box” page also mentions “Download odds · Download checklist.” Topps


📋 2024 Topps Chrome Dune — Checklist / Structure Highlights

From the Checklist Insider guide: Checklist Insider

Base Set & Parallels

  • Base set: 90 cards total. Checklist Insider

    • Features: 35 character cards (from Dune Part One and Part Two) + 65 scene cards (from Part One) Checklist Insider

  • Parallels / special refractors & variants include:

    • Rainbow Refractor

    • Arrakis Beige Pulsar Refractor

    • Sand Worm RayWave Refractor

    • Magenta Refractor ( /299 )

    • Purple Speckle Refractor ( /275 )

    • Purple Lava Refractor ( /250 )

    • Blue Sonar Refractor ( /225 )

    • Bene Gesserit Purple & Blue Refractor ( /199 )

    • Aqua Lava Refractor ( /175 )

    • Aqua Refractor ( /175 )

    • Eye of Ibad Blue Wave Refractor ( /150 )

    • Atreides Green Prism Refractor ( /199 )

    • Caladan Blue Refractor ( /75 )

    • Gold Refractor ( /50 )

    • Orange Refractor ( /25 )

    • Wave Refractor ( /10 )

    • Red Refractor ( /5 )

    • Spice Orange Speckle Refractor (1/1)

    • SuperFractor (1/1)

    • Printing Plates (1/1) Checklist Insider

Autograph / Chase Cards

Sample Base Cards (Characters)

From the character base listing: Checklist Insider

  • #1 Paul Atreides

  • #2 Chani

  • #3 Lady Jessica

  • #4 Duke Leto Atreides

  • #5 Duncan Idaho

  • #6 Baron Vladimir Harkonnen

  • #7 Rabban Harkonnen

  • #8 Stilgar

  • #9 Gurney Halleck

  • #10 Dr. Liet Kynes

  • … (continues up to #35 for character cards)

  • #36–#90 are scene / story cards (e.g. “Paul Studies Arrakis,” “The Sandworm Encounter,” etc.) Checklist Insider

Pack Odds & Parallel Rates (Selected Known)

From Checklist Insider: Checklist Insider

Base Parallel Odds (Hobby / Value Blaster):

  • Rainbow Refractor — 1:1 Hobby, 1:3 Value Blaster

  • Arrakis Beige Pulsar Refractor — 1:10 Hobby

  • Sand Worm RayWave Refractor — 1:7 in Value Blaster

  • Magenta Refractor (/299) — 1:23 Hobby, 1:69 Blaster

  • Purple Speckle Refractor (/275) — 1:25 Hobby, 1:75 Blaster

  • Purple Lava Refractor (/250) — 1:27 Hobby, 1:83 Blaster

  • Blue Sonar Refractor (/225) — 1:31 Hobby, 1:92 Blaster

  • Bene Gesserit Purple & Blue (/199) — 1:35 Hobby, 1:104 Blaster

  • Aqua Lava Refractor (/175) — 1:33 Hobby

  • Aqua Refractor (/175) — 1:19 Blaster

  • Eye of Ibad Blue Wave Refractor (/150) — 1:46 Hobby, 1:38 Blaster

  • Atreides Green Prism Refractor (/199) — 1:69 Hobby, 1:209 Blaster

  • Caladan Blue Refractor (/75) — 1:91 Hobby, 1:275 Blaster

  • Gold Refractor (/50) — 1:137 Hobby, 1:415 Blaster

  • Orange Refractor (/25) — 1:274 Hobby, 1:829 Blaster

  • Wave Refractor (/10) — 1:575 Hobby

  • Red Refractor (/5) — 1:1,369 Hobby, 1:4,135 Blaster

  • Spice Orange Speckle Refractor (1/1) — 1 in ~5,746 Hobby

  • SuperFractor (1/1) — ~1:6,863 Hobby, ~1:20,380 Blaster

  • Printing Plates (1/1) — ~1:1,692 Hobby, ~1:5,594 Blaster

 

 

🎬 “Dune: The Sand Saga That Took 40 Years to Finally Make Sense”

So… once upon a time, way back in the dusty sci-fi past, there was a book called Dune — the kind of book that made you feel smarter just for holding it, even if you never actually finished it. Frank Herbert wrote it in 1965, which means it’s older than most of the people arguing about the movies on Reddit.


🌵 The Original “Dune” Curse

Hollywood tried to adapt Dune before, but it was cursed.
First, there was David Lynch’s 1984 version — a film so weird, it made audiences feel like they had sniffed spice straight off the desert floor.
Kyle MacLachlan starred as Paul Atreides, but instead of interstellar politics, everyone remembers Sting wearing metal underwear. True story.

There was even a 1970s attempt by a guy named Alejandro Jodorowsky, who planned a 10-hour psychedelic space opera with Salvador Dalí and Pink Floyd. It never got made, but that might be the most “1970s thing” ever.


🚀 Fast-forward to 2021…

Enter Denis Villeneuve, the man who looked at Blade Runner 2049 and said, “You know what this needs? More sand.”
He rebooted Dune with a cast that could fill the front row of the Oscars:

  • Timothée Chalamet (Space emo prince)

  • Zendaya (Professional dream sequence star in Part One)

  • Jason Momoa (Bro who fights sandworms like they owe him money)

  • Oscar Isaac (Space dad goals)

The first movie, Dune: Part One (2021), covered half the book — basically the setup and “sandstorm of trauma” portion. It looked stunning, sounded epic, and left audiences saying, “Wait, that’s it?”


🏜️ Dune: Part Two (2024) — More Sand, More Worms, More Drama

Then came Part Two, and Villeneuve turned it up to eleven.
Finally, Zendaya got actual dialogue. Timothée went full chosen-one mode.
And Austin Butler joined the cast looking like a bald, evil Elvis who definitely drinks his coffee black.

We got giant sandworms, interplanetary politics, and more desert fashion than a Coachella afterparty.
By the end, it was clear — this wasn’t just space opera; it was space Shakespeare with monster worms.


🌶️ Why It Works (And Why We Love It)

  • It’s serious sci-fi with the vibe of a perfume commercial.

  • Every line sounds like a prophecy, even if it’s just someone saying “pass the water.”

  • The soundtrack slaps. Hans Zimmer basically scored what it feels like to get lost in Costco.

  • And yes, the worms are enormous — which is apparently great marketing for trading cards.


🃏 Tie-In: Why Topps Got Involved

The Topps Chrome Dune set is like the collector’s version of spice:

  • It’s shiny.

  • It’s addictive.

  • It’ll make you hallucinate your next box break paying off.

You’ve got autographs from the main cast, costume relics from the movie, and even cards that literally contain spice from the production set.
That’s right — your trading cards might be slightly sandy.