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Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration: All 9 Starter Sets

Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration Card Set guide with Kanto starter promos, packs and card stand
Guide thumbnail composite using official 30th Celebration Card Set product and promo-card imagery.

Official product page checked June 9, 2026. The Pokemon Card Game 30th Celebration Card Set is now the cleanest product in the 30th Celebration lineup for collectors who care about starter Pokemon, not just booster-pack chase cards. It releases in Japan on October 16, 2026, one month after the main 30th Celebration booster pack, and comes in nine regional variants.

Each variant has the same structure: three holo promo cards for one generation’s starter Pokemon, two random 30th Celebration booster packs, and a paper card stand that displays three cards. The official MSRP is JPY 1,200 tax included. That price matters because the two included booster packs alone account for JPY 720 of the MSRP based on the official JPY 360 pack price, leaving only JPY 480 of implied premium for the three promos and the display stand.

Key takeaway: this is not just a small accessory product. At MSRP, each 30th Celebration Card Set gives you two all-foil 30th Celebration packs plus three known starter Pokemon holo promos. Kanto will be the emotional headline, but the best buying plan is to decide whether you want one nostalgic trio, one favorite generation, or the full nine-set run of all 27 starter promos.

Oct 162026 Japan release
JPY 1,200MSRP per variant
9starter trio variants
27known holo promos

What Is Inside the 30th Celebration Card Set?

The official product page confirms a simple, collector-friendly package. Every card set includes three holo promo cards for that set’s starter Pokemon trio, two expansion packs of 30th Celebration, and one paper card stand for three cards. The booster packs are random, but the three promo cards are not random. If you buy the Bulbasaur, Charmander and Squirtle set, those are the three promos you receive.

Official Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration Card Set package with Bulbasaur Charmander and Squirtle promos
The first shown package is the Kanto starter version: Bulbasaur, Charmander and Squirtle. The same product structure repeats across all nine starter trios.
Official 30th Celebration Card Set contents with three promo cards two booster packs and paper card stand
The official contents image: three holo promos, two 30th Celebration booster packs, and a three-card display stand.
Official item Confirmed detail Buyer meaning
Release date October 16, 2026 The card sets release after the main booster pack launch on September 16.
MSRP JPY 1,200 tax included Very accessible at retail; likely to be demand-limited if supply is tight.
Promo cards 3 holo starter Pokemon cards per variant The promos are known and generation-specific, not random.
Booster packs 2 packs of 30th Celebration Each pack contains six random foil cards according to the official pack page.
Display item 1 paper card stand for three cards The product is meant for display, not only pack opening.

All 9 Starter Pokemon Card Sets

The card set lineup covers the first partner Pokemon from every mainline region from Kanto through Paldea. That gives the product a cleaner collecting goal than most small Pokemon TCG side products: you can buy one generation, or you can chase the full 27-card starter promo run.

Kanto – Bulbasaur, Charmander, Squirtle

The obvious headline set. Kanto has the original anime and Base Set nostalgia, and Charmander gives this trio a direct Charizard-family tailwind.

30th Celebration Bulbasaur promo cardBulbasaur
30th Celebration Charmander promo cardCharmander
30th Celebration Squirtle promo cardSquirtle

Johto – Chikorita, Cyndaquil, Totodile

The Johto set is the nostalgia pick for Gold, Silver and Crystal fans. Cyndaquil gives it the strongest single-character collector lane inside the trio.

30th Celebration Chikorita promo cardChikorita
30th Celebration Cyndaquil promo cardCyndaquil
30th Celebration Totodile promo cardTotodile

Hoenn – Treecko, Torchic, Mudkip

Hoenn should not be ignored. Mudkip and Torchic both have strong fan memory, while Treecko gives the trio a clean, bright art identity.

30th Celebration Treecko promo cardTreecko
30th Celebration Torchic promo cardTorchic
30th Celebration Mudkip promo cardMudkip

Sinnoh – Turtwig, Chimchar, Piplup

Sinnoh has an extra 2026 relevance because Pokemon Legends: Arceus kept the region’s character memory alive. Piplup is the main collector signal here.

30th Celebration Turtwig promo cardTurtwig
30th Celebration Chimchar promo cardChimchar
30th Celebration Piplup promo cardPiplup

Unova – Snivy, Tepig, Oshawott

Unova often gets less casual attention than Kanto or Sinnoh, but that can make it a better collector pick if supply gets uneven by generation.

30th Celebration Snivy promo cardSnivy
30th Celebration Tepig promo cardTepig
30th Celebration Oshawott promo cardOshawott

Kalos – Chespin, Fennekin, Froakie

Kalos has one clear star: Froakie, because Greninja is one of the strongest modern starter evolutions from a collector-demand standpoint.

30th Celebration Chespin promo cardChespin
30th Celebration Fennekin promo cardFennekin
30th Celebration Froakie promo cardFroakie

Alola – Rowlet, Litten, Popplio

Alola is one of the more balanced trios. Rowlet and Litten tend to carry the stronger character lanes, while Popplio rounds out a display-friendly color set.

30th Celebration Rowlet promo cardRowlet
30th Celebration Litten promo cardLitten
30th Celebration Popplio promo cardPopplio

Galar – Grookey, Scorbunny, Sobble

Galar is the Sword and Shield era pick. Scorbunny is likely the easiest sell to casual collectors, but all three work well as a modern-era sealed display set.

30th Celebration Grookey promo cardGrookey
30th Celebration Scorbunny promo cardScorbunny
30th Celebration Sobble promo cardSobble

Paldea – Sprigatito, Fuecoco, Quaxly

Paldea is the newest-generation route. It may not have Kanto nostalgia yet, but it reaches younger Scarlet and Violet collectors who started with these Pokemon.

30th Celebration Sprigatito promo cardSprigatito
30th Celebration Fuecoco promo cardFuecoco
30th Celebration Quaxly promo cardQuaxly

Which 30th Celebration Card Set Should You Buy First?

If all nine variants are available at MSRP, the most disciplined answer is simple: buy your favorite generation first, then decide whether to complete the run. If availability is limited, prioritize by collector demand and future liquidity.

1st priorityKanto

Bulbasaur, Charmander and Squirtle will be the easiest trio for global buyers to understand. This is the default pick for one-set buyers.

2nd priorityKalos

Froakie gives the set Greninja demand. If Kanto sells out quickly, Kalos is a practical backup with a clear collector hook.

3rd prioritySinnoh

Piplup plus long-running Sinnoh nostalgia makes this one safer than it may look at first glance.

Buyer type Best target Why
One-set nostalgia buyer Kanto Original starter trio, widest recognition, strongest display identity.
Modern starter collector Kalos or Paldea Froakie/Greninja demand for Kalos; newest-generation relevance for Paldea.
Full run collector All 9 variants Completes the 27-card starter promo sequence and gives 18 booster packs.
Budget buyer Favorite personal generation The promos are fixed, so personal attachment matters more than random pack odds.
Sealed display buyer Kanto, then Sinnoh/Kalos Those three have the cleanest global recognition story.

MSRP Value Math: Why JPY 1,200 Is Interesting

The official pack page lists the 30th Celebration booster pack at JPY 360 tax included, with six random foil kartu per pack. Since each card set includes two packs, the pack component is worth JPY 720 at MSRP. That leaves JPY 480 for the three holo promos and the paper stand.

Item MSRP math Interpretation
Card set MSRP JPY 1,200 Official tax-included retail price per variant.
Two booster packs JPY 360 x 2 = JPY 720 Based on the official booster pack MSRP.
Implied promo + stand premium JPY 480 Only JPY 160 per promo if the stand is valued at zero.
Full nine-set MSRP JPY 10,800 27 promos, 18 packs, and 9 stands.
Full-run pack value JPY 6,480 18 packs at JPY 360 each.
Full-run promo + stand premium JPY 4,320 Effective JPY 160 per promo before assigning any value to stands.

SST read: at MSRP, this is a better promo product than it first looks. The risk is not the retail math. The risk is availability, allocation and resale markup after release. If secondary prices rise too far above MSRP, the buying decision changes quickly.

What Do the Two 30th Celebration Packs Add?

The two included packs are not filler. The main 30th Celebration booster is the center of the 2026 anniversary program, with all-foil packs, the new FUR rarity, 30 Pikachu cards, and classic reprint attention covered in our broader 30th Celebration card list and chase-card guide.

That said, the card set should not be evaluated like a booster box. You are only getting two packs per variant, so the chance of a major chase from one card set is naturally limited. The real product thesis is the combination: fixed starter promos plus a small opening experience.

Pre-release caveat: as of June 9, 2026, the card set has not released. There are no real opening results, pull-rate samples, or sold-price histories for these promos. Any price forecast before October 16 should be treated as speculation.

Opening scenario How to think about it Buying action
One card set Two packs is a bonus opening, not a chase strategy. Buy for the starter trio first.
Three card sets Six packs gives a small sample, still not enough to hunt a specific chase. Pick three favorite generations.
All nine card sets 18 packs is close to a box-like opening experience but still product-specific. Only do this if you also want all 27 promos.

Should You Buy the Full Nine-Set Master Run?

The full nine-set run is the cleanest collector target: 27 known starter promos, 18 packs, and nine display stands. It is also the easiest way to avoid regretting a missing generation later if supply is uneven. The downside is obvious: if release-day resale prices spike, buying all nine at markup can become inefficient very fast.

Plan Pros Cons Best for
Buy Kanto only Lowest cost, strongest recognition Misses the 27-card run Casual nostalgia buyers
Buy 3 favorite generations Balanced cost and personal value Not a complete collector object Most buyers
Buy all 9 Complete promo sequence and 18 packs Higher upfront cost and harder availability Set collectors and sealed collectors
Wait for singles Can target exact promos Early singles may be overpriced Buyers who do not care about sealed packaging

Buying from Japan? We will track Japanese Pokemon sealed products, 30th Celebration availability and related booster-box inventory as release approaches.

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Browse Pokemon cards

The Collector Lanes: Why These 27 Promos Matter

Starter Pokemon cards are not all valued the same way. Some move because they are attached to a famous final evolution. Some move because the first-stage Pokemon itself is beloved. Some move because the product is easy to explain in one sentence. The 30th Celebration Card Set has all three forces working at once, which is why the lineup deserves more than a simple product-news post.

1. Original starter nostalgia

Kanto is the simple one. Bulbasaur, Charmander and Squirtle are the first three starters many international collectors ever saw on TV, in Game Boy games, and in early TCG products. The actual cards here are new 30th-anniversary promos, not reprints of 1990s cards, but the emotional hook is the same: the original choice screen. That makes the Kanto card set the easiest item to sell or gift because the buyer does not need deep 2026 Pokemon TCG knowledge to understand it.

2. Evolution-family demand

Some first partner Pokemon borrow demand from their final evolutions. Charmander benefits from Charizard. Froakie benefits from Greninja. Piplup benefits from Empoleon and from Sinnoh-era attachment. Scorbunny benefits from Cinderace for Sword and Shield fans. This does not mean the base starter promo becomes expensive automatically, but it does mean those trios have more collector search paths than a low-profile starter with fewer high-demand evolutions.

3. Full-run display collecting

The included paper stand tells you how Pokemon wants buyers to think about the product: this is a display object. A collector who buys all nine variants can line up the entire mainline starter history from Kanto through Paldea. That is a stronger story than nine unrelated accessory boxes. It is also why sealed collectors may prefer complete bundles with all nine variants rather than a random mix of whatever was available after release.

4. Entry-level anniversary product demand

High-end 30th Celebration products, especially premium boxes and specialty supply sets, can be expensive or limited. The card set is the opposite: it is low MSRP, visually obvious, and tied to characters rather than abstract rarities. That makes it the likely entry point for casual anniversary buyers. Low price does not guarantee easy availability, but it does increase the number of buyers who can justify adding one to an order.

Collector lane Strongest variants Why it matters Risk
Original nostalgia Kanto Most recognizable trio globally. Likely to get the highest release-week markup.
Evolution-family demand Kanto, Kalos, Sinnoh Charmander/Charizard, Froakie/Greninja, Piplup/Sinnoh memory. Demand may concentrate on one promo inside the trio.
Complete run All nine Clean 27-card starter history display. Requires finding every variant in good condition.
Modern generation buyers Galar, Paldea Appeals to newer Pokemon fans and younger collectors. May be overlooked by older nostalgia buyers at launch.

Card Set vs Booster Pack vs Premium 30th Products

The card set should be compared with the other official 30th Celebration products because each product has a different job. The booster pack is the pure opening product. The Premium Deck Set is for players and Eeveelution collectors. The FUTURISTIC BOX is a high-end supply and Pikachu ex promo product. The Card Set is the starter-promo and display product.

Product Official release Official MSRP Main reason to buy Best buyer
30th Celebration booster pack September 16, 2026 JPY 360 All-foil pack opening and core set chase cards. Openers, chase-card buyers, box buyers.
Premium Deck Set Espeon & Umbreon September 16, 2026 JPY 6,200 Two ready-to-play decks plus Espeon/Umbreon appeal. Players, Eeveelution collectors, gift buyers.
FUTURISTIC BOX September 16, 2026 JPY 27,500 FUR-style Pikachu ex promos and premium supplies. High-end collectors and sealed specialty buyers.
30th Celebration Card Set October 16, 2026 JPY 1,200 per variant Three known starter promos, two packs, display stand. Starter collectors, budget anniversary buyers, complete-run collectors.

This comparison is important because it keeps the buying decision grounded. If you want to open the set, a booster box or loose packs are the direct route. If you want a premium 30th display item, the FUTURISTIC BOX is the high-end choice. If you want a fixed character product with a low entry price, the Card Set is the more practical target.

SST buyer rule: do not buy the card set as a substitute for a booster box. Buy it because the fixed promos matter to you. The two packs are a bonus and a useful price anchor, but the starter trio should be the reason you choose one variant over another.

How to identify the exact variant before buying

Because all nine products share the same general name, overseas listings can become messy. A good listing should show the three starter names or a clear front-package photo. Do not rely only on a translated title like “30th Celebration Card Set” because that can refer to any one of the nine variants. For a full set, verify every region one by one: Kanto, Johto, Hoenn, Sinnoh, Unova, Kalos, Alola, Galar and Paldea. If a seller cannot confirm the trio, treat the listing as incomplete until proven otherwise.

The same rule applies to images. The Kanto package is visually loud and easy to recognize, but a reused Kanto stock image does not prove the seller has the Kanto item. Ask for the actual variant photo when buying from a marketplace, especially if the price is above MSRP or if the seller is advertising a complete bundle.

Grading, Display and Sealed Storage Plan

Because every variant includes three visible starter promos and a display stand, there are three reasonable ways to treat this product after purchase: keep it sealed, open it for a display set, or separate the best-condition promos for grading. Each path has a different risk profile.

Keep sealed if packaging condition is strong

For a sealed collector, the package itself matters. Check the hanger tab, front plastic/window area, corner wear, crushing, and any seal damage. A clean sealed Kanto card set is a different object from an opened set with the same three cards. If the outside package arrives in excellent condition and you do not need the cards immediately, sealed storage is a defensible choice.

Open if you want the stand display

The card stand is not a throwaway item. It is part of the product’s design language. Opening one favorite generation and displaying the three promos together is probably the most satisfying use case for casual collectors. If you open, sleeve the cards before placing them near any stand or surface that might rub edges. Paper display pieces can look clean in photos but still create friction points if cards are moved repeatedly.

Grade selectively, not automatically

Do not assume every promo is worth grading. The cards are low-MSRP product promos, and the print run is unknown as of this article. Grading makes the most sense for a visibly clean Kanto promo, a favorite-generation card you want long term, or a card that develops clear singles demand after release. Before sending anything, inspect corners, back surface, edge whitening, print lines and centering. If singles are cheap after release, buying a cleaner copy may be easier than grading your first pulled copy.

Path When it makes sense What to check Common mistake
Keep sealed Package is clean and you care about sealed 30th products. Tabs, corners, dents, seal damage, front visibility. Overpaying for a damaged sealed copy.
Open for display You bought a favorite trio and want the stand experience. Use sleeves, avoid repeated handling, keep out of sunlight. Putting raw cards into display surfaces without protection.
Grade promos Card is very clean or demand is proven after release. Centering, edges, corners, surface, print lines. Grading every promo before the market has a price signal.
Buy singles later You only want one starter card. Compare raw condition photos and seller history. Paying release-week hype price for a common promo.

What We Will Watch After Release

The real article update will come after October 16, 2026, when Japan has actual product in hand. Before release, the most honest guide is built from official product facts and conservative buying logic. After release, the useful signals will be different: which variants are short, how clean the promos grade, whether Kanto separates from the rest, and whether full nine-set bundles become the preferred collector format.

Post-release signal Why it matters What would change our advice
Kanto premium Shows whether original-starter demand is separating from other trios. If Kanto becomes too expensive, Kalos/Sinnoh may be better value.
Full bundle availability Determines whether all-nine collecting is practical. If bundles are scarce, buying one favorite generation may be smarter.
Promo condition reports Important for grading and PSA 10 supply. If print lines or centering issues appear, clean raw copies matter more.
Pack opening data Clarifies whether the two included packs add meaningful chase value. If pull rates look harsh, the product should be valued mainly on promos.
Restock behavior Shows whether early markup is temporary. If restocks are visible, avoid panic buying at launch premiums.

Release-Week Decision Tree

Release week is when most mistakes happen. Buyers see one sold-out listing, assume every variant is disappearing, and pay a panic price before the market has found its level. The better approach is to decide your maximum price and your purpose before listings go live.

If you want Kanto only, set a strict ceiling and be willing to wait. Kanto is the one most likely to show early markup because every seller understands the Charmander/Squirtle/Bulbasaur appeal. If you want a favorite non-Kanto generation, do not let Kanto scarcity push you into overpaying for a different trio. If you want the full run, prioritize complete nine-variant bundles from reliable Japan sellers over assembling nine separate orders with nine shipping fees.

Release-week situation Best move Reason
Kanto is expensive, other trios are close to MSRP Buy your next-favorite trio first You avoid the highest hype premium while still getting the product format.
All nine are available as a verified bundle Compare bundle price against JPY 10,800 MSRP plus shipping The bundle may be worth it if it avoids missing variants and repeated shipping costs.
Singles appear immediately at high prices Wait unless condition is exceptional Early singles often reflect impatience, not stable demand.
Only opened sets are available Buy only if you do not care about sealed condition Opened products lose the sealed-display angle that makes the card set attractive.

Overseas Buyer Guide: Timing, Markups and What to Avoid

For overseas buyers, the hardest part will not be understanding the product. It will be getting clean Japanese stock at a sane price. A low-MSRP anniversary product with fixed starter promos is exactly the kind of item that can become annoying to buy after the first wave sells out.

Do not overpay just because the product has “30th” on the package. The correct target depends on your goal. If you want one display piece, pay attention to Kanto availability first. If you want all 27 promos, focus on complete nine-set bundles from a seller that can verify the variants. If you only want one specific card, waiting for raw singles may be smarter after the first opening wave.

Risk What it looks like How to handle it
Variant confusion Seller lists “30th card set” without naming the trio. Confirm the exact starter trio before payment.
Overpriced one-set listings Kanto listed at a large markup while other trios remain close to MSRP. Buy a favorite non-Kanto trio or wait for restock signals.
Incomplete bundles “Full set” does not actually include all nine variants. Check for Kanto, Johto, Hoenn, Sinnoh, Unova, Kalos, Alola, Galar and Paldea.
Opened pack products Promos included but booster packs removed or resealed. For sealed collecting, buy only clearly sealed card sets.
Singles FOMO Early promo singles priced like secret rares. Wait for supply from openings unless the card is a must-have.

Bottom Line

The 30th Celebration Card Set is one of the smarter products in the anniversary lineup because it gives buyers a fixed collecting target. The booster packs add excitement, but the real reason to care is the 27-card starter Pokemon promo run. At MSRP, the math is attractive. At heavy resale markup, the answer becomes more selective: Kanto for nostalgia, Kalos/Sinnoh for collector strength, favorite generation for personal value, and all nine only if you genuinely want the full run.

FAQ

When does the Pokemon 30th Celebration Card Set release?

The official Japanese release date is October 16, 2026. This is one month after the main 30th Celebration booster pack release on September 16, 2026.

How many 30th Celebration Card Set variants are there?

There are nine variants, one for each mainline starter Pokemon trio: Kanto, Johto, Hoenn, Sinnoh, Unova, Kalos, Alola, Galar and Paldea.

How many promo cards are in the full card set run?

The full nine-variant run includes 27 holo starter Pokemon promo cards.

What is the MSRP?

The official Japanese MSRP is JPY 1,200 tax included per card set variant.

Are the promo cards random?

No. The booster packs are random, but the three starter promo cards are fixed by variant.

Which card set is likely to be most popular?

Kanto is the safest popularity call because it includes Bulbasaur, Charmander and Squirtle. Kalos and Sinnoh are also strong because of Froakie/Greninja and Piplup/Sinnoh demand.

Is it better to buy one set or all nine?

Buy one set if you mainly want a display item or one favorite generation. Buy all nine only if you want the complete 27-card starter promo run and can get the variants at a reasonable price.

Should I open the included packs?

If you bought the set as a sealed display piece, keep it sealed. If you bought it for the promos and opening experience, opening two packs is fine, but do not treat two packs as a realistic chase-card strategy.

Pokemon 30th Premium Deck Set 2026: Espeon & Umbreon

Official product guide – updated June 9, 2026

Pokemon 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set: Espeon & Umbreon

The 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set is the cleanest Eeveelution product in the 2026 Pokemon Card Game MEGA anniversary lineup so far: two 60-card preconstructed decks, regular and full-art Espeon ex and Umbreon ex, a tin double deck case, playmat, coins, counters, and guide sheets in one Japanese release.

Source status: official Pokemon 30th anniversary product page checked on June 9, 2026. Prices and release details can change if The Pokemon Company updates the page.

Release: Sep 16, 2026
MSRP: JPY 6,200 tax included
2 x 60-card decks
Espeon ex + Umbreon ex

Pokemon 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set Espeon and Umbreon guide thumbnail
Thumbnail composite using official product and card imagery from the 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set page.

Key takeaway: this is not a random-pull booster product. It is a fixed deck-and-accessory set with major collector appeal because both Eeveelution mascots get regular ex cards and full-art ex cards inside a 30th anniversary product. Sealed collectors should watch allocation early; singles-focused buyers can wait for opening supply unless they want the complete package.

Quick stats

Product Pokemon Card Game MEGA 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set Espeon & Umbreon
Japanese name ポケモンカードゲーム MEGA「30th CELEBRATION プレミアムデッキセット エーフィ・ブラッキー」
Release date September 16, 2026 in Japan
MSRP JPY 6,200 tax included
Main cards Espeon ex, Umbreon ex, full-art Espeon ex, full-art Umbreon ex
Deck structure Two 60-card preconstructed decks, one centered on Espeon ex and one centered on Umbreon ex
Best first read Strong sealed-display candidate for Eeveelution collectors; practical fixed-content buy for players who want both decks and supplies

What the Premium Deck Set actually is

The Premium Deck Set is the 30th Celebration product for collectors who want Eeveelutions and for players who want something usable out of the box. The official page positions it as a 30th anniversary deck product, not as a booster box. That distinction matters for buyers: the value is not in pull-rate speculation, but in fixed contents, featured Pokemon, sealed presentation, and Japan allocation.

The box is built around Espeon ex and Umbreon ex. Each mascot gets a dedicated 60-card deck, and each deck includes a full-art version of its headline ex card. The product also bundles the items needed to sit down and play: counters, markers, coins, a paper full playmat, a tin double deck case, and guide sheets.

Official sealed box image for 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set Espeon and Umbreon
Official sealed package image. The front messaging is clear: Espeon, Umbreon, two 60-card decks, and a premium 30th anniversary presentation.
Official full contents image for 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set Espeon and Umbreon
The official contents spread shows the decks, cards, playmat, tin case, counters, coins, and guide items in one fixed bundle.

Espeon ex and Umbreon ex are the reason this product matters

Eeveelution products are rarely judged like ordinary starter products. Espeon and Umbreon both carry collector demand outside pure gameplay, and pairing them in one 30th anniversary deck set gives the product a sharper identity than a generic preconstructed deck. The official card images show four important headline cards: regular Espeon ex, regular Umbreon ex, full-art Espeon ex, and full-art Umbreon ex.

Espeon ex regular card image
Espeon ex, 014/040, HP 260.
Umbreon ex regular card image
Umbreon ex, 017/040, HP 270.
Espeon ex full-art card image
Full-art Espeon ex, 043/040.
Umbreon ex full-art card image
Full-art Umbreon ex, 044/040.

Card Number shown HP shown Collector read
Espeon ex 014/040 260 Core deck mascot and the lower-number Espeon ex copy.
Umbreon ex 017/040 270 Core deck mascot and the lower-number Umbreon ex copy.
Espeon ex full art 043/040 260 The Espeon collector target inside the fixed set.
Umbreon ex full art 044/040 270 The Umbreon collector target and likely the most watched single from the product.

The full-art pair is the sealed-product hook. A buyer who only wants one card may eventually prefer singles, but a buyer who wants both full arts plus the regular ex cards has a much easier case for the sealed set.

Secondary cards worth noticing

The official page highlights additional cards around the deck themes, including Eevee, Victini, Zeraora, and Zoroark. These are not the same kind of headline chase as the full-art ex pair, but they make the decks feel more complete and give the product more display value when opened.

Eevee card image from the Premium Deck Set
Eevee connects both deck identities.
Victini card image from the Premium Deck Set
Victini appears on the Espeon-side official card showcase.
Zeraora card image from the Premium Deck Set
Zeraora appears on the Umbreon-side official card showcase.
Zoroark card image from the Premium Deck Set
Zoroark gives the Umbreon deck another dark-themed anchor.

Contents checklist: what comes in the box

The official contents are straightforward and buyer-friendly. You are paying for two playable decks and a coordinated accessory bundle rather than trying to hit random rarity slots.

Included item Quantity Why it matters
Espeon ex deck 1 deck, 60 cards Preconstructed deck centered on Espeon ex.
Umbreon ex deck 1 deck, 60 cards Preconstructed deck centered on Umbreon ex.
Damage counters and markers 2 sheets Practical play item, also branded with the product feel.
Pokemon coins 2 coins Espeon and Umbreon coins add small collector appeal.
Playmat 1 paper full playmat Lets new or casual players start immediately.
Slide-style double deck case 1 tin case Stores and carries the two decks together.
Beginner guide 1 sheet Useful for first-time players.
Players guide 1 sheet Supports play and product onboarding.
Official image of two preconstructed decks
Two preconstructed 60-card decks are the core of the product.
Official damage counter and marker image
Damage counter and marker sheets are included for immediate play.
Official tin double deck case image
The tin double deck case is the standout accessory for sealed-display buyers.
Official paper playmat image
The paper full playmat carries the 30th Celebration design language.

Official Espeon and Umbreon Pokemon coins
Official Espeon and Umbreon coins. These are small, but they reinforce the two-mascot collector angle.

Official deck lists

The official page publishes the full deck lists for both 60-card decks. Because these are preconstructed decks, repeated cards are expected and the set is not designed like a random booster opening. For buyers, the deck lists are useful for two reasons: they confirm the fixed card package, and they show that both decks are built around a multi-type energy spread rather than only the mascot ex card.

Espeon ex deck list

Pokemon

Card Count
トロピウス 1
チェリンボ 2
チェリム 2
ロコン 2
キュウコン 2
ビクティニ 1
ビクティニ(フルイラスト) 1
ミュウ 1
マリル 2
マリルリ 1
エーフィex 1
エーフィex(フルイラスト) 1
キュワワー 1
ガルーラ 1
イーブイ 2

Trainers

Card Count
きずぐすり 1
ハイパーボール 2
ポケパッド 2
ポケモンいれかえ 2
ポケモンキャッチャー 2
アイリスの闘志 2
ウエートレス 1
ガイ 4
ジャッジマン 1
タケシのスカウト 1
リーリエの決心 3

Energy

Card Count
基本草エネルギー 5
基本炎エネルギー 5
基本超エネルギー 8

Umbreon ex deck list

Pokemon

Card Count
ゼラオラ 1
ゼラオラ(フルイラスト) 1
エレズン 2
ストリンダー 2
ミュウツー 1
クレセリア 1
ブラッキーex 1
ブラッキーex(フルイラスト) 1
ヤミカラス 1
ゾロア 2
ゾロアーク 1
モノズ 2
ジヘッド 1
サザンドラ 1
イーブイ 2
メテノ 1

Trainers

Card Count
クラッシュハンマー 1
ハイパーボール 2
ポケパッド 2
ポケモンいれかえ 2
ポケモンキャッチャー 2
アイリスの闘志 2
ウエートレス 1
ガイ 4
ジャッジマン 1
ボスの指令 1
リーリエの決心 3

Energy

Card Count
基本雷エネルギー 5
基本超エネルギー 5
基本悪エネルギー 8

Buying decision: sealed set, singles, or wait?

The right move depends on what you actually want. This product will attract sealed collectors because it combines Eeveelutions, 30th anniversary branding, full-art cards, and a visible accessory bundle. It will also attract singles buyers because the full-art Espeon ex and full-art Umbreon ex are fixed targets. Those two buyer groups should not behave the same way.

Buyer type Best action Reason
Sealed Eeveelution collector Prioritize early availability if the price is close to Japan MSRP plus normal import costs. The product identity is strong even before gameplay or market data develops.
Player who wants both decks Buying sealed makes sense. You receive two 60-card decks and all basic play accessories in one package.
Singles buyer chasing only Umbreon ex full art Wait for opening supply unless launch pricing is unusually calm. The full product includes many items you may not need.
Display collector who dislikes opened deck products Keep one sealed and consider singles separately. Opening the set creates useful cards and accessories, but sealed presentation is part of the appeal.
Speculative buyer Be careful with launch premiums. Eeveelution demand can create early spikes, but fixed-content products often see singles supply after release.

Why sealed demand could be stronger than a normal deck set

Most preconstructed products are judged by playability and beginner value. This one has a collector layer. Espeon and Umbreon are not random mascot choices, the box clearly says 30th Celebration, and the official contents image gives sealed collectors an easy display story. That does not guarantee long-term price movement, but it does explain why launch allocation may feel tighter than a standard deck product.

Why singles buyers should not panic

The product is fixed-content. If many boxes are opened, copies of the regular ex cards and full-art ex cards should enter the market. The real singles risk is not that the cards are hidden behind random pull rates; it is that Umbreon and Espeon demand can hold up better than normal deck promos. If you only need one card for a binder, waiting for early openings is usually more rational than paying for the entire sealed set at a heavy import premium.

Launch plan: what to check before paying a premium

The most common mistake with a product like this is treating every early listing as proof of the final market. A fixed deck set can look scarce before release because reservation windows are short, retailers ration quantities, and overseas sellers need time to confirm their allocations. That early noise is useful, but it is not the same as post-release supply. The better approach is to separate three questions: do you want the sealed object, do you want the cards, and do you need the product at launch?

1. Confirm whether the premium is for timing or for scarcity

If a listing is expensive before September 16, ask what the price is actually buying. Sometimes the premium is simply paying for early certainty, international handling, and the seller’s allocation risk. That can be acceptable for a collector who needs a clean sealed box. It is less attractive for a buyer who only wants the full-art Umbreon ex or full-art Espeon ex, because those singles should have a separate market once opened product appears.

Price signal What it usually means Best response
Near MSRP plus normal shipping and service cost Healthy early access if the seller is reliable. Reasonable for sealed collectors and players.
Large premium before release Seller is pricing allocation uncertainty and Eeveelution demand. Only buy if launch timing or sealed condition matters.
Singles listed before broad openings Speculative pricing, not a stable market. Use caution and compare after opening volume starts.
Bundles with unrelated 30th items Seller may be moving allocation as a package. Check whether the extra products match your goal.

2. Do not confuse fixed contents with guaranteed investment value

Fixed contents are good for clarity. They are not a guarantee that every sealed box will climb. The Premium Deck Set has the right ingredients for attention: Espeon, Umbreon, full-art ex cards, 30th branding, and a visible accessory package. Still, the long-term sealed market will depend on print quantity, restocks, product condition, how many boxes are opened, and whether later 30th Celebration products pull attention away.

That is why the safest language is not “this will be rare” but “this has a stronger collector identity than an ordinary deck set.” That distinction matters. A collector identity can support demand, but scarcity has to be proven by allocation, restock behavior, and real market data after release.

3. Decide your open-versus-sealed rule in advance

If you buy one box and later decide you want the full-art pair for a binder, you will face the classic sealed-product problem: opening the box gives you the cards and accessories, but removes the sealed display value. For Eeveelution products, that tension is stronger because sealed collectors and card collectors may both want the same item.

Your goal Suggested rule Reason
Complete sealed 30th shelf Keep the product sealed and source singles separately if needed. The box identity is part of what you are collecting.
Play both decks Open one copy and store the accessories carefully. The decks and play items are meant to be used.
Binder copies of Espeon and Umbreon Watch singles first, then decide if sealed still makes sense. Singles may be cheaper than paying for accessories you do not need.
Long-term sealed hold Prioritize box condition, seller reliability, and storage. Damage to the outer package hurts the exact value you are trying to preserve.

4. Storage and condition matter more than usual

Because this is a boxed deck-and-accessory product, condition checks are different from a booster box. Corners, seal clarity, dents in the box face, and crushing during international shipping can matter more than tiny surface marks on a normal retail blister. If you are buying for sealed display, request protective packing and avoid unnecessary reshipping. If you are buying to open, box condition still matters for presentation, but it should not drive the entire buying decision.

For overseas customers, this is where trusted sourcing matters. A cheap listing can become expensive if the product arrives with crushed corners or if the seller cannot confirm allocation. A slightly higher reliable landed price can be better than a low headline price with weak shipping protection.

How it fits into the 30th Celebration product lineup

The Premium Deck Set sits between the low-cost 30th Celebration Card Set products and the much more expensive FUTURISTIC BOX. It is not trying to be the most premium item in the lineup. It is the Eeveelution deck product with real play value and a lower MSRP than the accessory-heavy FUTURISTIC BOX.

Product Japan release MSRP Main buyer angle
30th Celebration expansion pack Sep 16, 2026 JPY 360 per pack Booster-opening path for the main anniversary set.
Premium Deck Set Espeon & Umbreon Sep 16, 2026 JPY 6,200 Fixed Eeveelution decks, full-art ex pair, and play accessories.
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX Sep 16, 2026 JPY 27,500 Pikachu ex FUR promos and premium YOSHIROTTEN accessory bundle.
30th Celebration Card Set starter Pokemon products Oct 16, 2026 JPY 1,200 each Starter Pokemon card sets with accessible price points.

For most overseas Pokemon buyers, this means the Premium Deck Set is the practical middle option. It is more expensive than a small card set, but it has enough product depth to justify international shipping in a way a single low-price domestic item often cannot. It is far less expensive than the FUTURISTIC BOX, but it still has a clear collector identity.

Shop-by-intent routing

Intent Best SST route
I want Japanese sealed Pokemon products Browse Pokemon sealed boxes and products
I only want singles after release Browse Pokemon singles
I am comparing other 30th Celebration products Read the FUTURISTIC BOX guide and read the 30th Card Set guide
I need wholesale or bulk sourcing Contact SST wholesale

Overseas buyer notes

For international buyers, the Japanese MSRP is only the starting point. Real landed cost depends on allocation, domestic Japan availability, shipping weight, store markup, payment fees, and import handling. A 6,200 yen MSRP product can still become expensive overseas if early supply is tight or if sellers bundle it with other 30th products.

What to watch before release

Signal What it means Buyer action
Lottery-only sales in Japan Normal retail access may be limited at launch. Avoid assuming MSRP availability for overseas orders.
Large opening volume More singles supply for full-art Espeon ex and Umbreon ex. Singles buyers can wait for market discovery.
Sealed box premiums above normal import math Eeveelution demand is being priced in early. Buy only if sealed condition and timing matter to you.
Restock or second-wave signals Launch panic may cool. Delay non-urgent sealed purchases.

The cleanest plan is to decide your lane before launch. Sealed collectors should focus on trusted sourcing and box condition. Singles buyers should track the full-art pair after opening supply begins. Players should compare the sealed set price with the cost of building the decks or buying the parts separately.

Where Samurai Sword Tokyo fits

We will keep tracking the 30th Celebration lineup as more Japanese product details, allocation signals, and card images appear. For overseas buyers, the practical goal is simple: avoid launch confusion, understand which product actually matches your collecting goal, and choose sealed or singles with the right timing.

FAQ

What is the 30th Celebration Premium Deck Set Espeon & Umbreon?

It is a Pokemon Card Game MEGA 30th anniversary product built around two ready-to-play 60-card decks: one centered on Espeon ex and one centered on Umbreon ex.

When does the Espeon & Umbreon Premium Deck Set release in Japan?

The official release date is September 16, 2026 in Japan.

What is the Japanese MSRP?

The official Japanese suggested retail price is 6,200 yen including tax.

Does the product include full-art Espeon ex and Umbreon ex cards?

Yes. The official product page states that full-art Espeon ex and full-art Umbreon ex cards are included in the two decks.

How many decks are in the product?

There are two 60-card preconstructed decks, one for Espeon ex and one for Umbreon ex.

Is this a booster product with random pulls?

No. The product is a preconstructed deck set with listed contents, not a booster box. Some cards appear multiple times because of the deck structure.

Which buyers should consider sealed boxes?

Sealed buyers who collect Eeveelution display items, want both decks, or need the bundled accessories have the clearest case for buying the full product.

Should singles buyers wait?

Singles buyers who only want one copy of the full-art Espeon ex or Umbreon ex should consider waiting for opening supply and market pricing rather than paying for the entire set immediately.

How does this compare with the 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX?

The Premium Deck Set is a lower MSRP, gameplay-ready Eeveelution product, while the FUTURISTIC BOX is a premium accessory and Pikachu ex FUR display product at a much higher MSRP.

Will Samurai Sword Tokyo support overseas buyers?

Samurai Sword Tokyo plans coverage and buying routes for Japanese Pokemon sealed products and singles. Availability depends on Japan allocation and release timing.


Pokemon 30th FUTURISTIC BOX 2026: Pikachu ex FUR

Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX guide with Pikachu ex FUR promos and official supplies
Guide thumbnail composite using official FUTURISTIC BOX product, contents, and Pikachu ex FUR promo imagery.

Official product page checked June 9, 2026. The Pokemon Card Game MEGA 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX is the premium supply product in Japan’s 30th Celebration lineup. It releases on September 16, 2026 at JPY 27,500 tax included, and the official page positions it around YOSHIROTTEN-designed battle supplies plus two FUR-specification Pikachu ex promo cards.

The most important buyer point is simple: this is not a booster box and the official contents list does not include booster packs. The FUTURISTIC BOX is a collector-supply box. You are buying the two Pikachu ex FUR promos, the coordinated play accessories, the box design, and the 30th anniversary product identity.

Key takeaway: buy FUTURISTIC BOX if you want the complete YOSHIROTTEN-designed premium package or both Pikachu ex FUR promos sealed with the official supplies. Skip it if your main goal is opening 30th Celebration booster packs; the regular booster, Premium Deck Set, and October Card Set serve different buying goals.

Sep 162026 Japan release
JPY 27,500MSRP tax included
2Pikachu ex FUR promos
0booster packs listed

What Is the 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX?

FUTURISTIC BOX is a premium battle-supply and display package created for Pokemon Card Game’s 30th anniversary. The official page says the product incorporates the design of graphic artist YOSHIROTTEN. That matters because the same official page connects the two Pikachu ex promos to the FUR cards in the main 30th Celebration expansion, including Mew ex and Mewtwo ex, whose illustrations are also credited to YOSHIROTTEN.

Official Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX package
Official product image for the 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX. The box itself is part of the collector appeal, not just a container.

The product is expensive compared with the rest of the 30th Celebration lineup, but it is also structurally different. The JPY 360 booster pack is the opening product. The Premium Deck Set is the Espeon/Umbreon deck product. The October Card Set is the starter-promo product with two booster packs. FUTURISTIC BOX is the high-end supply product anchored by two exclusive Pikachu ex promos.

Do not treat this as a pack-opening product. The official contents list includes promo cards and supplies, but no 30th Celebration booster packs. If you want packs, compare the main booster and October Card Set instead.

The Two Pikachu ex FUR Promo Cards

The headline card contents are two different FUR-specification Pikachu ex promo cards, one copy of each. The official card scans show both as Lightning-type Basic Pokemon ex with HP 190, promo numbers 131/M-P and 132/M-P, and YOSHIROTTEN illustration credit. From a collector standpoint, the two-card pair is more important than either card alone because it gives FUTURISTIC BOX a self-contained chase identity.

30th Celebration Pikachu ex FUR promo card 131 M-P
Pikachu ex 131/M-P
30th Celebration Pikachu ex FUR promo card 132 M-P
Pikachu ex 132/M-P

Promo Official scan detail Collector read
Pikachu ex 131/M-P Bright, pale FUR-style artwork; HP 190; YOSHIROTTEN credit. The cleaner display card and likely the easier one to place in a white-background collection page.
Pikachu ex 132/M-P Darker purple/blue FUR-style artwork; HP 190; YOSHIROTTEN credit. The stronger contrast card and the more dramatic pairing with the box artwork.
Both together Two different promo numbers, one copy each in the official contents list. The pair is the real product thesis; splitting the sealed box just to keep one promo weakens the collector story.

Why the FUR Pikachu ex Pair Matters

The FUR label is the reason FUTURISTIC BOX feels different from a normal promo accessory product. Pokemon anniversary products often become collectible because they combine three signals: a major character, a special visual treatment, and a product structure that is easy to explain years later. FUTURISTIC BOX has all three. Pikachu is the headline character, FUR is the new 30th Celebration visual lane, and the product name itself tells future buyers exactly what it was.

The official page also makes the artist link explicit. It says the Pikachu ex promos are illustrated by YOSHIROTTEN, like the FUR Mew ex and Mewtwo ex in the 30th Celebration expansion. That creates a small but important internal set: Mew ex, Mewtwo ex, and the two Pikachu ex promos can be viewed together as the YOSHIROTTEN/FUR collector lane of the anniversary. Even if a buyer never opens booster packs, FUTURISTIC BOX gives that buyer a direct route into the same design story.

Collector signal Why it matters How to act
Pikachu Pikachu has the broadest recognition of any Pokemon card character and is easy for global buyers to understand. If you collect Pikachu cards, treat the two promos as a pair, not as interchangeable singles.
FUR treatment FUR is tied to the 30th Celebration visual identity and appears on headline anniversary cards. Track these promos alongside the main-set FUR chase cards, not only alongside generic promos.
YOSHIROTTEN credit The artist/design identity is visible across the box, supplies, and card scans. Keep official product images and source notes if you build a display page or sales listing later.
Promo numbering The cards are numbered 131/M-P and 132/M-P on the official scans. Use the promo numbers in inventory, grading notes, and watchlists to avoid mixing them with main-set cards.

This is also why the two-card pair may behave differently from a random promo given out with a purchase campaign. The cards are bound to a large, expensive product. If the product is not opened heavily, loose singles may be less available than people expect. If the product is opened heavily for the promos, complete opened supply sets may become harder to assemble. Either way, the pair is the clean unit to watch.

Official Supply Checklist

The second half of the product is the coordinated supply set. The official page lists special deck shields, a flip deck case, a special rubber playmat, a flip playmat case, damage dice, damage counter storage, poison/burn markers, Pokemon coins, and a display frame. This is why the product should be evaluated as a premium desk/display kit rather than a normal sealed Pokemon TCG box.

Official 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX contents image with supplies and Pikachu ex promos
Official contents image showing the two Pikachu ex promos and the full YOSHIROTTEN-designed supply package.
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX deck shieldsDeck shields
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX playmat casePlaymat case
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX metal damage diceMetal damage dice
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX Pokemon coinsPokemon coins
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX flip deck caseFlip deck case
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX half rubber playmatHalf rubber playmat
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX damage counter caseDamage case
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX poison and burn markersPoison/burn markers
30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX display frameDisplay frame

Official item Quantity Buyer meaning
Pikachu ex promo cards 2 types, 1 each The core collectible reason to buy the box.
Special deck shields 1 set, 64 sleeves Usable for a full deck, but sealed collectors may keep them untouched.
Flip deck case 1 Display and transport item matching the FUTURISTIC BOX design.
Special rubber playmat 1 The biggest visual supply piece and likely the easiest item to display outside the box.
Flip playmat case 1 Completes the playmat setup; important for opened-box buyers.
Metal damage dice 12 Premium play accessory, not a paper insert.
Metal poison/burn markers 1 each Small but premium-feeling play pieces.
Pokemon coins 2 Useful for players and part of the matching display set.
Display frame 1 set Signals that the box is intended to be shown, not only stored.

Component-by-Component Buyer Notes

The official list is long, but not every component carries the same collector importance. The two promos are the card value center. The playmat and deck case are the visible supply center. The dice, coins, markers, and cases complete the premium kit, but they are easier to lose if the box is opened. If you buy an opened FUTURISTIC BOX later, completeness is the first thing to check.

The display frame is especially important because it explains how Pokemon wants the product to be used. This is not only a tournament supply box; it is a desk-display product. The two Pikachu ex promos plus a display frame create a straightforward opened-box use case: keep the cards visible, store the supplies together, and maintain the box as part of the product identity.

Component group Priority Kondisi check Resale note
Pikachu ex promos Highest Centering, surface, corners, and whether both promo numbers are present. The two-card pair should be easier to sell than one isolated copy if collectors chase the complete box identity.
Outer box Very high for sealed buyers Corner dents, compression, sticker residue, sun fading, and edge rub. Sealed product value depends heavily on box presentation because the box art is a major feature.
Playmat and cases High for opened buyers Factory folds, scuffs, or missing matching cases. Useful components can sell separately, but separated supply sets lose the complete-product story.
Dice, coins, markers Medium but completion-critical Count every small part; official quantities matter. Small missing pieces make an opened set harder to present as complete.
Display frame High for display collectors Scratches and clear-panel condition. The frame helps justify opening the product instead of treating it only as sealed inventory.

For SST buyers, the practical rule is to decide your box status before shipping: sealed archive, opened display, or component split. Mixing those strategies creates avoidable damage. A sealed archive should stay protected. An opened display should be opened carefully and documented. A component split should be photographed before anything is separated.

MSRP Logic: Why JPY 27,500 Is a Different Decision

JPY 27,500 tax included makes FUTURISTIC BOX the premium item in the official 30th Celebration product lineup. That price should not be compared only to booster packs because the product is not pack-based. The better comparison is whether you value a complete anniversary supply set plus two Pikachu ex FUR promos enough to buy the whole package at retail.

For a sealed collector, the attraction is the intact product: box, promos, accessories, and official 30th branding all together. For an opener, the attraction is practical use: sleeves, playmat, cases, dice, coins, markers, display frame, and the two cards. For a singles-only buyer, the product may be too broad unless the Pikachu ex promos become hard to buy separately after release.

SST guidance anchor: the official MSRP ladder itself proves the product category. At JPY 27,500, FUTURISTIC BOX costs more than 76 regular 30th Celebration booster packs at the official JPY 360 pack MSRP, more than four Premium Deck Sets at the official JPY 6,200 MSRP, and more than twenty-two October Card Sets at the official JPY 1,200 MSRP. That is not a prediction that it will outperform those products; it is evidence that Pokemon priced it as a premium supply/display object, not as a pack-value substitute.

Buyer lens How to judge JPY 27,500 Main risk
Sealed collector Paying for the sealed anniversary object and future scarcity of a high-end product. Large boxes need storage space and condition protection.
Pikachu collector Paying for two official Pikachu ex FUR promos in one product. Singles may be cheaper than the box if supply is broad.
Player/supply user Paying for a coordinated premium play setup. Opening the box reduces sealed premium.
Pack opener This is the wrong product if the goal is booster-pack volume. No booster packs are listed in the official contents.

Who Should Buy FUTURISTIC BOX First?

If supply is limited at launch, FUTURISTIC BOX should not be bought with the same logic as a normal booster box. It has a narrower but more premium audience. The first buyers should be people who specifically want the complete Pikachu/YOSHIROTTEN package.

Best fitPikachu collectors

Two separate Pikachu ex FUR promo numbers make the product easy to understand and easy to file in a Pikachu collection.

Strong fitSealed anniversary collectors

The box, product identity, price point, and sales-channel note make it more collectible than a normal accessory kit.

Kondisial fitPlayers who use premium supplies

Openers get a full accessory set, but should accept that opening removes sealed-box value.

Buy plan When it makes sense What to avoid
One sealed box You want the official product intact and can protect the outer box. Opening immediately without deciding what to do with the promos and supplies.
One to open, one sealed You are a high-conviction Pikachu or 30th collector with enough budget. Buying a second box before seeing real post-release supply.
Promo singles only You do not care about supplies, box condition, or sealed product identity. Buying too early if launch prices are driven by first-week hype.
Skip for boosters Your budget is for opening packs and chasing FUR cards from the main expansion. Confusing FUTURISTIC BOX with the booster product.

Japan Sales Channel and Availability Notes

The official page says this product is handled by Pokemon Center Online only at first. It also notes that later handling may occur at Pokemon Centers, Pokemon Stores, and the Amazon.co.jp Pokemon Store. That wording matters: later availability is possible, but not the same as a guaranteed nationwide release on day one.

For overseas buyers, this usually means the first wave may be lottery- or allocation-sensitive. The safest approach is to watch official Japan channels first, then compare export-shop pricing only after the first listings stabilize. Paying a large premium before launch can make sense only if your priority is sealed completion and you cannot tolerate missing the first wave.

Pre-release caution: there is no official allocation number, no confirmed English release, and no real sold-price history as of June 9, 2026. Treat any secondary price before release as a pre-order market signal, not a stable market value.

Release-Week Decision Tree

Because FUTURISTIC BOX is expensive and channel-limited, release week should be handled with a plan. The worst approach is to decide only after seeing a fast-moving premium price. Before September 16, choose which result you are willing to accept: retail box, premium sealed box, singles wait, or no purchase. That prevents a collector from paying a sealed-box premium when the real goal was only the cards.

Release-week situation Best action Reason
You can buy at or near MSRP Buy if you want sealed or complete opened display. Retail is the cleanest entry point for a high-MSRP anniversary product.
Only heavy premium listings are available Pause unless you are a high-conviction Pikachu collector. First-week pricing can reflect scarcity panic rather than stable demand.
You only want the two promos Watch singles instead of buying the full box immediately. The supply set and shipping burden are unnecessary if the promos are the entire goal.
You want one to open and one to keep sealed Wait for post-release supply signals before buying the second box. Two-box plans are expensive and should be based on real availability, not only fear of missing out.
You are choosing between this and boosters Buy boosters if opening is the goal; buy FUTURISTIC BOX if display/supply collecting is the goal. The official contents list makes these different products, not substitutes.

For overseas buyers, release-week caution is even more important. Shipping, proxy fees, and packaging quality can change the effective price more than the raw product premium. A cheap listing with poor shipping protection is not cheap if the box arrives crushed. A more expensive seller who protects the outer box may be the better sealed-collector route.

FUTURISTIC BOX vs Other 30th Celebration Products

The 30th Celebration lineup now has several products that sound similar but serve very different buyers. FUTURISTIC BOX is the premium supply product. The booster pack is the opening product. The Premium Deck Set is the Espeon/Umbreon deck product. The October Card Set is the starter-promo plus two-pack product.

Product Official date MSRP Best buyer
30th Celebration booster pack September 16, 2026 JPY 360 per pack Pack openers chasing the main expansion and FUR cards.
Premium Deck Set Espeon/Umbreon September 16, 2026 JPY 6,200 Eeveelution and deck-product collectors.
FUTURISTIC BOX September 16, 2026 JPY 27,500 Pikachu ex FUR, YOSHIROTTEN, supply, and sealed premium collectors.
30th Celebration Card Set October 16, 2026 JPY 1,200 per variant Starter Pokemon promo collectors and buyers who still want two booster packs.

If your 30th Celebration budget is limited, the cleanest order is: boosters for opening, Card Set for starter promos, Premium Deck Set for Eeveelutions, and FUTURISTIC BOX for high-end Pikachu/supply collecting. The product is not meant to be the cheapest route into the anniversary set.

How FUTURISTIC BOX Fits a 30th Celebration Collection

A complete 30th Celebration plan can be built in layers. The first layer is the main expansion, because it carries the core anniversary card list and the FUR rarity debut. The second layer is the sealed product lineup, because the booster, Premium Deck Set, FUTURISTIC BOX, and Card Set each represent a different part of the anniversary. The third layer is promo completion, where the 27 starter promos and the two Pikachu ex FUR promos become separate goals.

FUTURISTIC BOX belongs to the premium layer. It is not required for every collector, but it gives the collection a centerpiece. If you imagine a shelf or display case, the booster box and packs are compact, the starter Card Sets are colorful and character-driven, and FUTURISTIC BOX is the large visual product that announces the YOSHIROTTEN/FUR theme.

Collection goal Relevant 30th product Why FUTURISTIC BOX matters
Open the set 30th Celebration booster pack FUTURISTIC BOX is optional because it does not add pack volume.
Collect FUR artwork Main expansion plus FUTURISTIC BOX The Pikachu ex promos extend the FUR/YOSHIROTTEN lane beyond booster pulls.
Collect starter Pokemon promos October 30th Celebration Card Set Different goal; Card Set is broad starter coverage, FUTURISTIC BOX is premium Pikachu.
Collect sealed anniversary products All official 30th products FUTURISTIC BOX is likely the largest and most premium sealed object in the lineup.
Build a display setup FUTURISTIC BOX The playmat, display frame, deck case, and matching accessories are designed for visual use.

If budget forces a choice, pick the product that matches your collection identity. A booster opener does not need FUTURISTIC BOX first. A Pikachu collector should watch it closely. A sealed anniversary collector should treat it as a potential anchor item. A casual buyer who only wants a 30th Celebration souvenir may be better served by the JPY 1,200 Card Set.

Buying from Japan? We will track Japanese Pokemon sealed products, 30th Celebration availability, and related anniversary inventory as release approaches.

Browse Pokemon sealed boxes
Browse Pokemon cards

Overseas Buyer Guide

FUTURISTIC BOX is likely to be awkward for overseas buyers because it is larger than a normal card product and includes accessories rather than packs. Shipping cost, box protection, and outer-box condition all matter. If you buy sealed, ask how the seller will protect the corners and whether the product will be shipped inside another carton.

For collectors outside Japan, the main decision is whether to chase the sealed product or wait for the two Pikachu ex promos. Sealed is cleaner for long-term display and completion. Singles are more efficient if you do not care about the supplies. Opened accessories may also appear separately, but supply parts can be harder to keep complete because the box contains many small components.

Overseas path Pros Cons
Buy sealed Japanese box Complete product, strongest anniversary story, easiest to authenticate as a set. Higher shipping cost, condition risk, possible launch premium.
Buy both Pikachu ex promos Lower storage burden and direct card focus. Misses the official box and supply package.
Buy opened supply parts Useful if you only want playmat, sleeves, or display frame. Harder to verify completeness; parts may sell unevenly.
Wait until after release More real data and less first-week noise. Risk of missing a tight first wave if demand is strong.

Storage, Grading, and Display Notes

If you open FUTURISTIC BOX, sleeve both Pikachu ex promos immediately and keep all packaging, inserts, and supply wrappers together. The two promos should be treated as a pair. If you grade one and not the other, your collection becomes less coherent unless you are only chasing a single artwork.

If you keep the box sealed, protect it like a premium sealed accessory product rather than a booster box. The surface area is larger, corners matter, and shelf rub can reduce the appeal of the box art. For display, avoid direct sunlight because the product uses vivid gradient colors that are part of its identity.

What We Will Watch After Release

The first post-release update should not be about hype alone. The useful signals are supply, opening behavior, singles availability, and whether collectors treat the two promos as a pair. If many boxes stay sealed, the promo singles may remain thinner than expected. If many boxes are opened, sealed product may become more meaningful but individual supply pieces may scatter across the market.

Signal Why it matters What it changes
Pokemon Center Online availability Shows whether the first wave is tight or manageable. Determines whether overseas buyers should rush or wait.
Later retail/Amazon handling The official page says later handling may occur, so this is the biggest supply variable. More channels could soften sealed premiums.
Promo singles volume Shows how many boxes are being opened for the two Pikachu cards. Helps decide sealed box vs promo singles.
Complete opened sets Shows whether buyers keep all supplies together. Complete opened sets may become a separate collector route.
Box-condition premiums Large premium boxes often separate by condition quickly. Strong condition premiums make careful shipping more important.

Our recommendation will change if official availability broadens, if singles become much easier to buy than expected, or if sealed boxes show a sharp condition premium. Until release data exists, the conservative read is to treat FUTURISTIC BOX as a premium product with collector appeal, not as a guaranteed short-term price move.

Bottom Line

30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX is the most premium official product in the early 30th Celebration lineup. It is not the product to buy if you only want pack volume. It is the product to buy if the combination of two Pikachu ex FUR promos, YOSHIROTTEN-designed supplies, and a high-end 30th anniversary box fits your collection.

The practical SST answer: watch launch allocation carefully, do not confuse the box with a booster product, and decide before release whether you are a sealed-box collector, a Pikachu promo collector, or a supply user. Those are three different buying strategies, and FUTURISTIC BOX only makes full sense when your strategy is clear.

Want the Japan-side watchlist? Track 30th Celebration sealed inventory, Pikachu promo availability, and related Japanese Pokemon products as launch approaches.

Check Pokemon sealed boxes
Read the 30th Celebration card guide

FAQ

When does Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration FUTURISTIC BOX release?

The official release date is September 16, 2026 in Japan.

What is the MSRP of FUTURISTIC BOX?

The official MSRP is JPY 27,500 tax included.

Does FUTURISTIC BOX include booster packs?

No booster packs are listed in the official contents. The product includes two Pikachu ex promo cards and a premium supply set.

How many Pikachu ex promos are included?

The official contents list says two types of Pikachu ex promo cards, one copy each. The official scans show promo numbers 131/M-P and 132/M-P.

Who illustrated the Pikachu ex FUR promos?

The official card scans credit YOSHIROTTEN, and the official product page says the promos follow the same artist context as the FUR Mew ex and Mewtwo ex cards in the main expansion.

Where will FUTURISTIC BOX be sold in Japan?

The official page says Pokemon Center Online only at first, with possible later handling at Pokemon Centers, Pokemon Stores, and Amazon.co.jp Pokemon Store.

Is FUTURISTIC BOX better than the 30th Celebration Card Set?

They serve different buyers. FUTURISTIC BOX is the premium Pikachu/supply product. The Card Set is the starter Pokemon promo product and includes two booster packs per variant.

Should overseas buyers buy sealed or wait for singles?

Buy sealed if you want the complete anniversary object. Wait for singles if your only goal is the two Pikachu ex promos and you do not care about the accessories.

Is this a good product for pack opening?

No. If your goal is opening packs, focus on the 30th Celebration booster product or card-set products that include packs.

Will there be an English version?

No English version is confirmed in the official Japanese product page as of June 9, 2026.

Set ulang tahun ke-30 Pokémon TCG 2026: tanggal rilis, rarity baru, dan panduan lengkap

30th Celebration is not just another Pokemon TCG set — it’s the first worldwide simultaneous release in the trading card game’s 30-year history. Confirmed September 16, 2026 in Japan and launching globally around the same time, this set breaks every precedent: all-foil cards, a brand new rarity type, classic card reprints spanning three decades, and a special pack structure at ¥360 per pack.

The Pokemon Trading Card Game launched in October 1996 in Japan. Thirty years later, The Pokemon Company is marking the milestone with a set that bridges every generation — from Base Set Pikachu to modern Pikachu & Zekrom GX reprints. For international collectors, the simultaneous worldwide release eliminates the usual 2–3 month wait between Japanese and English availability for the first time ever.

This guide covers everything announced and predicted about 30th Celebration as of April 2026 — the unique pack structure, confirmed reprints, the new rarity type, companion products, and what this means for collectors and the secondary market. Our team at Samurai Sword INC has been tracking the 30th anniversary announcements from Tokyo since Pokemon Day 2026, and we’ll update this guide as new details emerge.

Key Takeaway
Confirmed Reprints (April 2026 Update)

Three iconic cards have been officially confirmed for 30th Celebration:

  • Pikachu & Zekrom GX (originally from Team Up / Tag Bolt)
  • Solgaleo GX (originally from Sun & Moon base set)
  • Lugia (originally from Aquapolis / Wind from the Sea)

These join the new-rarity Pikachu, Mewtwo, and Mew cards previously announced on the sell sheet. More reprints are expected to be revealed as September approaches.

30th Celebration launches September 16 in Japan with a worldwide release to follow — the first simultaneous global Pokemon TCG launch ever. All cards are foil. Packs cost ¥360 (6 cards each), boxes are ¥7,200 (20 packs). A brand new rarity type debuts featuring Pikachu, Mewtwo, and Mew. Classic card reprints confirmed. A Premium Deck Set (Espeon & Umbreon) launches alongside.

Latest Update — Confirmed Details (May 7, 2026)

The 30th Celebration set has now been officially confirmed by The Pokémon Company. Key details since the initial reveal:

  • Release dates: Japan — Wednesday, September 16, 2026. English worldwide — Friday, September 18, 2026. Unusually, this set releases worldwide nearly simultaneously rather than following the typical JPN-first pattern.
  • Booster pack format: Six kartu per pack instead of the standard five — and every card is foil. This is the first mainline TCG set to be entirely foil since Crown Zenith.
  • New rarity confirmed: A brand-new rarity tier showcasing an opalescent / pearlescent sheen — preview cards include Pikachu, Mew, and Mewtwo. The official rarity name and pull rate have not yet been disclosed.
  • Confirmed reprints (preview reveal): Pikachu (Base Set), Charizard (Base Set), Palkia Lv.X (Great Encounters), Lugia (Aquapolis), Uxie (Legends Awakened), Darkrai & Cresselia LEGEND (Triumphant), Pikachu & Zekrom-GX (Team Up), Raikou (Vivid Voltage), Zacian V (Sword & Shield), Arceus VSTAR (Brilliant Stars).
  • Companion products: “30th Celebration Premium Deck Set Espeon & Umbreon” (September 16). Nine “30th Celebration Card Sets” featuring all 27 starter Pokémon — releases October 16, 2026.

Sources: pokemon.com / pokemon-card.com (official), PokéBeach, Insider Gaming, PokéCottage. Reviewed May 7, 2026.

¥7,200
JPN BOX MSRP

Sep 16
Expected JPN Date

All Foil
Every Card

Worldwide
Simultaneous Release

Set Overview: What Is 30th Celebration?

30th Celebration is a special commemorative set marking the 30th anniversary of the Pokemon Trading Card Game. Unlike standard expansion packs or MEGA sets, this is a standalone celebration product with a unique structure designed for both collectors and nostalgic fans across every generation.

Spec 30th Celebration Standard MEGA Set (for comparison)
Confirmed Date (JPN) September 16, 2026 Varies
Worldwide Release Simultaneous (first ever) JPN first, EN 2–3 months later
Cards per Pack 6 (all foil) 5
MSRP (Pack) ¥360 ¥200
Packs per Box 20 30
MSRP (Box) ¥7,200 ¥6,000
Card Treatment All foil Standard (foil for rares only)
New Rarity Yes (new type debuting) Standard rarity structure
Theme 30 years of Pokemon TCG history Set-specific theme
Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration official announcement banner from The Pokemon Company

The 25th Anniversary Comparison

The closest precedent is 2021’s Celebrations (25th Anniversary Collection in Japan). That set became one of the most sought-after products of its era — sealed Elite Trainer Boxes appreciated from $50 to $150+ within a year, and Japanese 25th Anniversary Collection boxes went from ¥5,500 to ¥15,000+. The 30th Celebration appears to be a larger-scale, more premium version of that concept.

Anniversary Set Track Record

Anniversary Product Post-Release Appreciation
20th (2016) CP6 Expansion Pack 20th Anniversary Boxes: ¥4,500 → ¥30,000+ (5 years)
25th (2021) 25th Anniversary Collection Boxes: ¥5,500 → ¥15,000+ (1 year)
30th (2026) 30th Celebration TBD — but precedent is strong
Anniversary Premium

Every major Pokemon TCG anniversary product has appreciated significantly in the sealed market. The 20th Anniversary CP6 set is now worth 6x its original MSRP. The 25th Anniversary Collection nearly tripled within a year. The 30th Celebration — with its worldwide simultaneous release and all-foil treatment — is positioned as the most ambitious anniversary product yet.

What Makes This Set Historic

Pokemon TCG 30th anniversary celebration visual showing 30 years of card game history from 1996 to 2026
30 years of the Pokemon Trading Card Game — 1996 to 2026

First-Ever Worldwide Simultaneous Release

In the Pokemon TCG’s entire 30-year history, Japanese sets have always released first, with English and other language versions following 2–3 months later. 30th Celebration breaks this pattern entirely. The worldwide simultaneous launch means:

  • No early-access window — Japanese and English versions drop at the same time
  • Global hype concentrated into a single date — no staggered demand
  • Potential pricing impact — the usual JPN premium over English may be different for this set since there’s no first-mover advantage
  • Unified collector excitement — the entire global community opens together

All-Foil Cards

Every single card in 30th Celebration is foil — there are no standard non-foil prints. This is a premium treatment that elevates the entire set’s visual appeal and potential collector value. Even common-tier cards in all-foil sets tend to hold value better than non-foil equivalents.

Unique Pack Structure

At ¥360 per pack (6 cards, all foil), the per-card cost is ¥60 — compared to ¥40 per card in standard MEGA packs (¥200 / 5 cards). The premium is justified by the all-foil treatment, but it also means boxes at ¥7,200 (20 packs) cost ¥1,200 more than standard MEGA boxes (¥6,000). The pack-to-box ratio is also lower: 20 packs vs. 30, meaning fewer total pulls per box but higher individual card quality.

Classic Card Reprints

Following the successful formula from 2021’s Celebrations, the 30th Celebration includes reprints of iconic cards from across the game’s history. Confirmed and anticipated reprints span from the original Base Set era through VSTAR and beyond — giving collectors a chance to own updated versions of cards that defined each generation.

Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration product preview showing booster pack design and new foil rarity

The New Rarity Type

30th Celebration introduces a brand new card rarity — the first new rarity type since Mega Ultra Rare (MUR) was introduced with the MEGA series. Sell sheet materials shown at the Pokemon Day 2026 presentation featured three Pokemon in this new rarity: Pikachu, Mewtwo, and Mew.

What We Know So Far

  • Three cards confirmed in the new rarity: Pikachu, Mewtwo, Mew
  • Likely a special foil treatment distinct from existing SAR/MUR patterns
  • Expected to be the top chase cards of the set
  • Design details not yet revealed — official artwork pending

Why These Three Pokemon

Pikachu, Mewtwo, and Mew represent the absolute core of the Pokemon franchise:

  • Pikachu — The franchise mascot. Every anniversary set has featured a special Pikachu, and they consistently become the set’s flagship card
  • Mewtwo — The original chase card from Base Set. Mewtwo holo from 1996 defined what a “valuable Pokemon card” meant for an entire generation
  • Mew — The mythical counterpart to Mewtwo. Mew cards carry a unique collector appeal across all eras
Collector Insight

Special Pikachu cards from anniversary sets have historically been among the most valuable cards of their year. The Pikachu VMAX from Celebrations (25th) reached ¥15,000+. If the new rarity Pikachu follows this pattern with a 30th-anniversary premium, it could be one of the defining chase cards of 2026.

Predicted Chase Card Values

Speculative estimates based on anniversary set precedent and Japanese market tracker predictions. Actual values will be determined after release.

Predicted Card Rarity Predicted Price (JPN)
Pikachu (30th Anniversary) New Rarity ¥15,000–30,000+
Mewtwo (30th Anniversary) New Rarity ¥10,000–25,000
Mew (30th Anniversary) New Rarity ¥10,000–20,000
Pikachu & Zekrom GX (Reprint) SR ¥3,000–8,000
Solgaleo GX (Reprint) SR ¥2,000–5,000
Lugia (Aquapolis Reprint) SR ¥3,000–8,000

Classic Card Reprints

Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration classic card reprints including Pikachu and Zekrom GX, Solgaleo GX, and Lugia from Aquapolis
Confirmed and anticipated classic card reprints spanning 30 years of Pokemon TCG

The Pokemon Day 2026 presentation confirmed multiple classic card reprints in 30th Celebration. Following the formula from the 25th Anniversary Celebrations, these reprints feature iconic cards from each era of the game’s history — updated with modern foil treatments while preserving the original artwork or paying homage to the original design.

Confirmed / Heavily Anticipated Reprints

Card Original Set (Year) Era
Pikachu & Zekrom GX Team Up (2019) Tag Team GX
Solgaleo GX Sun & Moon Base (2016) GX Era
Lugia Aquapolis (2003) e-Series
Darkrai & Cresselia LEGEND Triumphant (2010) LEGEND Era
Arceus VSTAR Brilliant Stars (2022) VSTAR Era
Classic Pikachu Base Set homage (1996) Original Series

The selection deliberately covers every major era of the Pokemon TCG — from the original Base Set through GX, LEGEND, VSTAR, and into the current generation. Each reprint card in the 25th Anniversary set became collectible in its own right; expect the 30th Anniversary reprints to follow the same trajectory with the added prestige of the all-foil treatment.

First Partner Illustration Collection

Alongside the main 30th Celebration set, a First Partner Illustration Collection has been announced — featuring starter Pokemon from each region in AR (Art Rare) promo treatments. The first wave covers Kanto, Sinnoh, and Alola starters (Bulbasaur, Charmander, Squirtle, Turtwig, Chimchar, Piplup, Rowlet, Litten, Popplio). This companion product adds additional collector appeal to the anniversary lineup.

Reprint Value Pattern

In the 25th Anniversary Celebrations, reprints of classic cards like Base Set Charizard and Gold Star Umbreon held strong secondary market values — with the Charizard reprint reaching ¥5,000+ even as a modern reprint. The 30th Celebration’s all-foil treatment could elevate reprint values further, as every card in the set carries a premium finish.

Full Product Lineup

30th Celebration launches with a focused but premium product lineup. Unlike standard expansion packs with their Starter Sets and accessories, the 30th Anniversary products are positioned as collector-first releases.

Product Price (JPY) Price (USD est.) Contents
Booster Box ¥7,200 ~$48 20 packs × 6 all-foil cards
Booster Pack ¥360 ~$2.40 6 all-foil cards
Premium Deck Set (Espeon & Umbreon) TBA TBA Deck + exclusive promo cards + packs
30th Card Sets (×10) TBA TBA Starter trio promo cards per generation (Oct 16)
Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration additional product preview with Espeon and Umbreon Premium Deck Set

30th Celebration Premium Deck Set: Espeon & Umbreon

Releasing alongside the main set, the Premium Deck Set Espeon & Umbreon is the flagship companion product for the 30th anniversary. Espeon and Umbreon — the Generation II Eeveelutions that debuted alongside the Pokemon TCG’s early expansion — are fan-favorites with enormous collector demand. Details on exclusive promo cards and full contents are still to be announced, but Premium Deck Sets in the current era typically include:

  • Playable deck with exclusive promo cards
  • Multiple booster packs from the main set
  • Premium accessories (deck box, sleeves, playmat possibilities)
  • Collector-grade packaging

Previous Eeveelution premium products have been among the most collected items in the Pokemon TCG. The Eevee Heroes VMAX Special Set (2021) and various Eeveelution promo boxes regularly command premiums in the sealed market.

30th Anniversary Card Sets (October 16, 2026)

Pokemon TCG 30th Anniversary Card Sets featuring starter Pokemon trios from all nine generations, releasing October 16 2026
30th Anniversary Card Sets — starter Pokemon trios from every generation (Source: PokéGuardian)

According to PokéGuardian, 10 Card Set products will release on October 16, 2026 — one month after the main booster set. Each Card Set features the three starter Pokemon from a specific generation, covering all nine regions:

Generation Region Starters
I Kanto Bulbasaur, Charmander, Squirtle
II Johto Chikorita, Cyndaquil, Totodile
III Hoenn Treecko, Torchic, Mudkip
IV Sinnoh Turtwig, Chimchar, Piplup
V Unova Snivy, Tepig, Oshawott
VI Kalos Chespin, Fennekin, Froakie
VII Alola Rowlet, Litten, Popplio
VIII Galar Grookey, Scorbunny, Sobble
IX Paldea Sprigatito, Fuecoco, Quaxly

First Partner Illustration Collection — Connected Artwork

Each trio’s cards connect to form a single panoramic scene featuring iconic locations from their region:

Pokemon TCG First Partner Illustration Collection Kanto starters Bulbasaur Charmander Squirtle connected panoramic artwork
Kanto — Bulbasaur, Charmander, Squirtle (Art Rare)
Pokemon TCG First Partner Illustration Collection Sinnoh starters Turtwig Chimchar Piplup connected panoramic artwork
Sinnoh — Turtwig, Chimchar, Piplup (Art Rare)
Pokemon TCG First Partner Illustration Collection Alola starters Rowlet Litten Popplio connected panoramic artwork
Alola — Rowlet, Litten, Popplio (Art Rare)

These Card Sets complement the First Partner Illustration Collection series and extend the 30th anniversary celebration into a multi-month product lineup. Specific card treatments and pricing are still to be confirmed.

Pokemon TCG 30th Celebration sell sheet showing booster box pack structure and new rarity Pikachu Mewtwo Mew cards
30th Celebration sell sheet — booster pack lineup and product details (Source: PokéGuardian)

30th Anniversary Cross-Brand Collaborations

Beyond the TCG itself, The Pokemon Company has confirmed several major brand collaborations as part of the 30th anniversary celebration:

  • LEGO × Pokémon — First-ever official LEGO Pokemon sets
  • adidas × Pokémon — Collaborative footwear and apparel line
  • McDonald’s × Pokémon TCG — Happy Meal promo cards (continuing annual tradition)
  • UNIQLO × Pokémon — UT collection featuring 30th anniversary designs

These collaborations bring Pokemon’s 30th anniversary into mainstream retail, which historically drives broader consumer interest in the TCG. The 25th anniversary saw similar partnerships that correlated with increased sealed product demand.

Should You Buy This Set?

30th Celebration is a unique product in the Pokemon TCG landscape — it’s not a standard expansion, not a High Class Pack, and not a MEGA set. It’s a once-in-a-decade anniversary release with characteristics that set it apart from anything else releasing in 2026.

For Collectors (Experience-First Buyers)

This is almost certainly a must-open set for collectors. The all-foil treatment means every pack delivers a visually premium experience. The classic reprints create a nostalgic journey through 30 years of the game. And the new rarity Pikachu/Mewtwo/Mew cards could be among the most memorable chase cards of the decade. If you collect for the joy of it, 30th Celebration is built specifically for you.

Collector verdict: Strong buy. Anniversary products are once-in-five-years events, the all-foil treatment is unique, and the worldwide simultaneous release makes this a shared global collector moment.

For Sealed Collectors

Anniversary sealed product has an exceptional track record. The 20th Anniversary CP6 (2016) is now worth 6x MSRP. The 25th Anniversary Collection (2021) nearly tripled within a year. At ¥7,200 per box, the entry point is higher than standard sets, but the 30th anniversary only happens once.

Buy at Launch

  • Secure boxes at MSRP before any markup
  • Anniversary products historically sell through fast
  • Worldwide launch = concentrated global demand
  • Risk: larger print run could mean easier availability

Wait for Market Data

  • See actual pull rates and card values first
  • Simultaneous release means no JPN early-access rush
  • Potential for restocks given worldwide coordination
  • Risk: if supply is limited, boxes move fast

JPN vs. English: A Different Equation

Unlike every other set we cover, 30th Celebration’s worldwide simultaneous release means the usual JPN-first advantage doesn’t apply. Both versions launch together, so the typical 15–40% JPN premium may not materialize in the same way. However, Japanese print quality and card texture have historically commanded a collector premium regardless of timing. Japanese boxes may still hold value differently than English equivalents based on print quality alone — but this is the first time we’re seeing a level playing field on release timing.

How to Buy Japanese Pokemon Cards

Even with a worldwide simultaneous release, Japanese 30th Celebration products may still be easier to source through Japanese channels for international collectors — especially if regional allocation varies or if the Japanese version’s print quality creates separate demand.

Japanese Retail (Lottery System)

Major Japanese retailers use a lottery (抽選) system for popular releases, and a 30th anniversary product is expected to generate extremely high demand:

  • Pokemon Center Online — Random selection; highest demand, lowest odds
  • Geo / TSUTAYA / Yodobashi — Regional lottery applications
  • Amazon Japan — Availability windows open closer to launch
  • Rakuten — Multiple sellers; prices vary

International Options

Samurai Sword INC ships authentic Japanese Pokemon products directly from Tokyo to the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and beyond. For 30th Celebration, we’ll offer both the main booster box and the Premium Deck Set Espeon & Umbreon as they become available.

Coming Soon
30th Celebration Booster Box (JPN)
Expected MSRP ¥7,200 (~$48) + shipping
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked international delivery

Browse Our Collection →

Key Dates to Watch

Date Event
February 27, 2026 Pokemon Day presentation — 30th Celebration announced
April 2026 Official set details and card previews expected
Summer 2026 Full card list reveal anticipated
September 16, 2026 Expected Japan availability
September 2026 Expected worldwide availability (simultaneous)
October 16, 2026 30th Anniversary Card Sets (×10) release (rumored)

Frequently Asked Questions

When does 30th Celebration release?

30th Celebration is confirmed for September 16, 2026 in Japan, with a worldwide simultaneous release — the first in Pokemon TCG history. This means Japanese and English (and other language) versions would launch around the same time, eliminating the usual 2–3 month gap. Exact worldwide dates are subject to confirmation.

How much does a 30th Celebration booster box cost?

The expected Japanese booster box MSRP is ¥7,200 (approximately $48) for 20 packs of 6 all-foil cards each. This is ¥1,200 more than standard MEGA set boxes (¥6,000 for 30 packs), reflecting the premium all-foil treatment and commemorative nature of the set. Individual packs are ¥360 each.

What is the new rarity in 30th Celebration?

30th Celebration introduces a brand new card rarity type — the first new rarity since MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) debuted with the MEGA series. Three cards have been shown in this new rarity: Pikachu, Mewtwo, and Mew. Specific details about the rarity’s name, visual treatment, and pull rates are still to be announced.

What classic cards are being reprinted?

Confirmed and anticipated reprints include Pikachu & Zekrom GX (Team Up), Solgaleo GX (Sun & Moon Base), Lugia (Aquapolis), Darkrai & Cresselia LEGEND (Triumphant), and Arceus VSTAR (Brilliant Stars). The set spans all major eras from Base Set through the modern era, with all cards receiving the set’s all-foil treatment.

Is 30th Celebration worth collecting?

Anniversary sets have a strong collector track record. The 20th Anniversary CP6 (2016) appreciated to 6x MSRP over 5 years. The 25th Anniversary Collection (2021) nearly tripled within a year. The 30th Celebration’s all-foil treatment, new rarity type, and worldwide simultaneous release position it as the most ambitious anniversary product in Pokemon TCG history.

Will the Japanese version be different from English?

With the worldwide simultaneous release, both Japanese and English versions are expected to launch around the same time — eliminating the usual JPN first-mover advantage. However, Japanese Pokemon cards have historically been valued for their print quality and texture. The Japanese version may still carry a collector premium based on physical card quality, even without a timing advantage.