For WWF Hasbro collectors, a signature can turn a nostalgic Mint on Card (MOC) figure into a true centrepiece. It is the closest thing you can get to “finishing” a carded figure - because the wrestler has physically interacted with the exact item that represents their early 1990s WWF run. Retrofigure tracks which Hasbro characters are still signing, how often they appear, and what signed examples actually sell for. See the signed wrestler status page here.
A signed Hasbro generally sells for more than an unsigned equivalent. As a rough guide, common active signers often add a 25% to 50% premium. Fan favourites (or clean, perfectly placed signatures) can push that to 50% to 100%. When you combine a strong name with low signing frequency, premiums can jump to 100% to 200%+ for top examples. Retrofigure also charts total signed sales and average prices across the line on the signed MOC sales page.
Actively signing legends are the sweet spot if you want to build a signed collection without waiting years. Names that still show up regularly on the signing circuit include Demolition Ax, Demolition Smash, Brutus “The Barber” Beefcake, Jake “The Snake” Roberts, Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Honky Tonk Man, and Ted DiBiase. Because these wrestlers still sign at conventions and mail-in events, supply is steady - but demand remains strong because collectors love display-ready, authenticated pieces.
Upcoming signings matter because they create predictable bursts of supply and demand. Retrofigure even lists events where Hasbro-era names are booked - useful if you want to buy an unsigned MOC now and get it signed in person. For example, the Retrofigure page highlights several February 2026 events featuring names like Sgt Slaughter, Ted DiBiase, Beefcake, Demolition and Hacksaw Duggan. If you are also tracking broader autograph calendars, the Official Wrestling Museum signing list is another handy reference point.
Then you have the irregular signers - the names that can spike values fast. The Undertaker is famously selective and tends to sign through controlled appearances, which is why signed Hasbro Taker pieces can be surprisingly tough to source. Shawn Michaels also signs less consistently than many peers, and opportunities often cluster around major conventions - so collectors compete hard when clean signed examples surface.
Finally, the most difficult category: deceased wrestlers. Their autograph supply is permanently capped, so scarcity only increases over time. A perfect example is Mr Perfect - signed Hasbro cards are exceptionally hard to come by, heavily scrutinised for authenticity, and can sell at several multiples of an unsigned figure. The same “finite supply” effect applies to other legends featured on the Retrofigure status page, where many characters are marked deceased - making genuine signed examples true trophy pieces.
In short, signed WWF Hasbro figures sit at the intersection of nostalgia and scarcity. Active signers keep the hobby accessible, irregular signers create premium spikes, and deceased legends define the top end of rarity. If you are collecting for display, investment, or pure childhood joy, tracking signing activity is one of the smartest ways to decide what to chase next.