Japanese TCG Store Samurai Sword

Inferno X Tassi di Uscita, Migliori Carte e Valore Box (M2)

Mega Charizard X ex’s gold Mega Ultra Rare card commands over ¥110,000 (~$730) on the Japanese secondary market — and it appears in roughly one out of every 50 boxes. That combination of Charizard-level demand and razor-thin supply makes Inferno X one of the most talked-about MEGA series sets five months after launch.

But raw hype doesn’t answer the questions collectors actually care about: What are the real pull rates? Which cards hold value? Is a box still worth opening at today’s prices?

This guide breaks it all down with Japanese market data from SNKRDUNK and Mercari — pricing sources most English-language articles don’t cover. Inside: top 10 cards by market value, pull rate percentages, box EV math, and five months of price trends.

Prices as of March 2026. Secondary market prices.

Key Takeaway

The Mega Charizard X ex MUR holds steady at ¥110,000 (~$730) — remarkably stable since its ¥108,000 launch price and one of the most price-stable MEGA series chase cards. At ~¥14,000 per box with a 1-in-50 MUR rate and 1-in-3 SAR rate, Inferno X is the premium Charizard set of the MEGA era.

~¥14,000
Box Price

116
Cards

~1/3
SAR Rate

30
Packs/Box

Set Overview — What Is Inferno X?

Inferno X is the second expansion in the MEGA series, built around Mega Charizard X ex and the return of Mega Evolution to the Pokémon TCG. The set dropped September 26, 2025, in Japan and arrived internationally as Phantasmal Flames on November 14, 2025.

Spec Detail
Set Name Inferno X (インフェルノX)
Set Code M2
Series MEGA
Release September 26, 2025 (JPN) / November 14, 2025 (ENG: Phantasmal Flames)
MSRP ¥5,400 (¥180 × 30 packs) → Market price: ~¥14,000 (~$93)
Cards 80 main set + 36 secret rares = 116 total
Packs/Box 30 packs, 5 cards each
Regulation J-Regulation

Key Cards & Mechanics

The set’s signature card — Mega Charizard X ex — carries the attack “Inferno X,” which discards any number of Fire Energy from your field and deals 90 damage for each. That kind of raw scaling makes it a centerpiece for Fire-type strategies.

Supporting the core are “Excited Turbo” on Magmortar and Oricorio ex (accelerating Energy attachment), “Multi Adapter” on Rotom ex (granting type flexibility), and the stadium “Dizzying Valley” (placing damage counters on freshly evolved Pokémon). The set rewards aggressive Fire builds while offering utility tools for other archetypes.

JPN vs English (Phantasmal Flames) Timeline

Japanese (Inferno X) English (Phantasmal Flames)
Release September 26, 2025 November 14, 2025
Set Code M2
Card Pool 80 + 36 SR Combined with other JPN sets
Print Quality Higher texture, foil quality Standard
Collector Premium 20-40% above ENG prices Baseline

Japanese Inferno X cards have historically traded at a 20-40% premium over their Phantasmal Flames counterparts, driven by print quality differences, earlier access, and strong collector demand for Japanese-language cards.

Top 10 Best Cards — Ranked by Market Value

Inferno X’s chase cards are dominated by one Pokémon. Mega Charizard X ex occupies the top three slots — and the price gap between #1 and #4 tells you everything about how rarity tiers affect value in this set.

Rank Card Rarity JPN Price USD Est.
1 Mega Charizard X ex MUR ¥110,000 ~$730
2 Mega Charizard X ex SAR ¥80,000 ~$530
3 Oricorio ex SAR ¥7,000 ~$47
4 Mega Charizard X ex SR ¥6,000 ~$40
5 Dawn (Hikari) SAR ¥5,300 ~$35
6 Mega Sharpedo ex SAR ¥2,000 ~$13
7 Dawn (Hikari) SR ¥1,900 ~$13
8 Mega Lopunny ex SAR ¥1,900 ~$13
9 Rotom ex SAR ¥1,700 ~$11
10 Piplup AR ¥900 ~$6

Prices as of March 2026. Sources: SNKRDUNK, Mercari completed sales.

#1 Mega Charizard X ex (MUR) — ¥110,000 (~$730)

Mega Charizard X ex MUR gold card from Inferno X M2
Mega Charizard X ex MUR — the crown jewel of the MEGA series era

The gold-plated Mega Ultra Rare is the crown jewel of the MEGA series era. The entire card surface is processed in metallic gold, with Charizard’s black body and blue flame accents cutting through the shimmer. MUR is a rarity tier exclusive to the MEGA series — think of it as the successor to Illustration Rares from Scarlet & Violet, but far scarcer.

At approximately 1 in 50 boxes (roughly 4-5 cartons), this is one of the lowest pull rates in recent Pokémon TCG sets.

The price has held remarkably steady since launch: initial sales landed around ¥108,000, and five months later, it sits at ¥110,000.

That kind of stability is unusual — and it’s driven by Charizard’s exceptionally strong collector demand. Every Charizard chase card in the last decade has followed a similar pattern: brief dip after launch, then stabilization or gradual recovery in historical cases.

For context, Mega Dragonite ex MUR from MEGA Dream ex (M2a) trades at roughly ¥20,000. Charizard carries over a 5× premium over other MUR cards purely on character popularity.

#2 Mega Charizard X ex (SAR) — ¥80,000 (~$530)

Mega Charizard X ex SAR special art rare from Inferno X M2
Mega Charizard X ex SAR — evolution journey in a single frame

The Special Art Rare features a sweeping panoramic illustration showing Charmander, Charmeleon, Charizard, and finally Mega Charizard X across the card. The evolution journey captured in a single frame has made this one of the most praised artworks in the MEGA series.

While the MUR gets attention for its gold finish, many collectors prefer the SAR for its artistic depth. The SAR appears roughly once per 3 boxes — far more accessible than the MUR’s 1-in-50 odds. Despite that, the price gap between SAR (¥80,000) and MUR (¥110,000) is narrower than in other sets, reflecting just how strong the SAR’s artwork-driven demand is.

#3 Oricorio ex (SAR) — ¥7,000 (~$47)

Oricorio ex SAR special art rare illustrated by Shinji Kanda from Inferno X M2
Oricorio ex SAR — Shinji Kanda’s signature psychedelic style

The surprise of the set. Illustrated by Shinji Kanda — one of the most sought-after TCG artists — Oricorio ex features his signature psychedelic, densely layered style. Kanda’s cards consistently command premiums regardless of the Pokémon depicted. The “Excited Turbo” ability also gives Oricorio ex genuine competitive utility, supporting both collector and player demand. After peaking near ¥16,000 at launch, the price has settled to ¥7,000 — a solid entry point for a Kanda original.

#4-5: Charizard SR & Dawn SAR

Dawn Hikari SAR special art rare supporter card from Inferno X M2
Dawn (Hikari) SAR — Diamond & Pearl protagonist’s MEGA era debut

Mega Charizard X ex SR (¥6,000) is the full-art version — the most accessible Charizard in the set. Dawn’s SAR (¥5,300) features the Diamond & Pearl-era protagonist on a bicycle, marking her TCG debut in the MEGA era. Supporter SARs with popular characters have historically retained value in past sets.

#6-10: Supporting Cast

Mega Sharpedo ex SAR (¥2,000), Dawn SR (¥1,900), Mega Lopunny ex SAR (¥1,900), and Rotom ex SAR (¥1,700) fill out the mid-tier. These are solid collector pieces at accessible price points. Piplup AR (¥900) rounds out the top 10 — Dawn’s partner Pokémon benefiting from character synergy.

Should You Buy an Inferno X Box?

Collector Type Recommendation Budget Range
Charizard Collector Singles for MUR, 1-2 boxes for fun ¥14,000-28,000 + singles
Set Completionist 2-3 boxes + singles ¥42,000 + singles
Sealed Collector Buy & hold sealed ¥14,000+ per box

For Charizard collectors, Inferno X is an essential set regardless of the numbers. For everyone else, the answer depends on what you’re chasing and how you prefer to collect.

Buying Tip

If you specifically want the MUR, buying singles is more cost-effective. At ¥110,000 for the card versus ¥14,000 per box with 1-in-50 odds, chasing through sealed product means an expected spend of ¥700,000 (50 boxes). But if you enjoy the opening experience and would be happy with any SAR or SR hit, a box or two gives you a legitimate shot at something valuable.

For Charizard Collectors

This set is the only source for Mega Charizard X ex in the MEGA series. The MUR and SAR are both high-value, high-demand cards with production volumes decreasing based on typical print schedules — the main production run has already ended.

The realistic play: If you specifically want the MUR, buying singles is more cost-effective. At ¥110,000 for the card versus ¥14,000 per box with 1-in-50 odds, chasing through sealed product means an expected spend of ¥700,000 (50 boxes). Singles win the math. But if you enjoy the thrill of opening and would be happy with any SAR or SR hit, a box or two gives you a legitimate shot at something valuable.

For Set Completionists

Two boxes give you a strong foundation: you’ll likely pull most of the 8 RR cards, 6-8 of the 12 AR cards, and 2 SR-or-above hits. Three boxes puts you near AR completion. The SAR and MUR slots are where it gets expensive — expect to fill those through singles.

Approach Cost What You Get
1 BOX ~¥14,000 (~$93) RR×4, AR×3, SR×1-2. SAR ~30% chance
3 BOX ~¥42,000 (~$280) Near-complete AR set. 1+ SAR likely
Singles (TOP5) ~¥208,300 (~$1,390) Guaranteed MUR + SAR + top hits
Opening experience Priceless

For Sealed Collectors

Inferno X boxes have limited circulation compared to other MEGA series sets like MEGA Dream ex or Nihil Zero. Charizard cover art and constrained supply have kept box prices stable at ¥14,000 — higher than the ¥7,500-10,000 range of other M-series boxes.

In past Charizard-led sets (Obsidian Flames, 151), sealed box prices trended upward 12-18 months post-release once restocks ended.

JPN vs English — Which Version?

Factor Japanese (Inferno X) English (Phantasmal Flames)
Box Price ~¥14,000 (~$93) ~$45-55
MUR Price ~¥110,000 (~$730) ~$400-500
SAR Price ~¥80,000 (~$530) ~$300-400
Print Quality Higher texture, foil detail Standard
Long-term Premium Historically 20-40% above ENG Baseline
Best For Collectors, historical value retention Players, budget collectors

Japanese cards carry a measurable premium. If you’re collecting with an eye toward historical value retention or appreciate the superior print quality, JPN is the stronger choice. If you’re primarily a player or working with a tighter budget, Phantasmal Flames delivers the same gameplay at a lower entry point. For a comprehensive breakdown, see our Japanese vs English Pokemon Cards comparison.

Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

Every Pokémon TCG booster box has negative expected value — that’s the standard structure across all sets, not specific to Inferno X. What matters is understanding what your guaranteed pulls are worth and what the upside looks like.

Pull Rates by Rarity

Rarity Per Box Types Odds per Specific Card
MUR ~1 in 50 boxes 1 type ~2% per box
SAR ~1 in 3 boxes 6 types ~5% per specific SAR
SR (Pokémon) ~0.68 per box 8 types ~9% per specific SR
SR (Trainer) 1 per box 9 types ~11% per specific SR
AR 3 per box 12 types ~25% per specific AR
RR 4 per box 8 types ~50% per specific RR

Pull rate data estimated from aggregate opening data (1,000+ box sample). Not officially confirmed by The Pokémon Company.

Inferno X pull rates by rarity visual chart showing MUR, SAR, SR, AR, and RR rates per box
Inferno X pull rates per box — MUR appears in roughly 1 out of every 50 boxes

Box EV Calculation

EV Summary

Box price: ~¥14,000 | Total EV: ~¥11,850 | EV ratio: ~85%. The gap between EV and box price is in line with other MEGA series sets and standard across Pokémon TCG products. It represents the cost of the opening experience, packaging, and retail margin.

Slot Avg. Value Qty/Box EV Contribution
RR ¥200 4.0 ¥800
AR ¥400 3.0 ¥1,200
SR (Trainer) ¥300 1.0 ¥300
SR (Pokémon) ¥2,000 0.68 ¥1,360
SAR ¥16,300 0.30 ¥4,890
MUR ¥110,000 0.02 ¥2,200
R/U/C bulk ¥50 22 ¥1,100
Total EV ¥11,850

What the EV Doesn’t Tell You

The MUR slot alone contributes ¥2,200 to every box’s EV despite appearing in only 2% of boxes. This means the median box — one without a MUR — returns closer to ¥9,700. But the SR and AR guaranteed slots ensure every box delivers at least ¥2,300-4,300 in baseline card value, depending on which SRs you pull.

If you hit a SAR (30% chance), your box return jumps to ¥5,100-83,400+ depending on which SAR. Hit the Charizard SAR and you’ve more than covered a 6-box investment.

Where to Buy Japanese Inferno X

Source Avg. Price Shipping Authenticity
Samurai Sword Tokyo ~¥14,000 (~$93) $10-20 intl. tracked Guaranteed authentic
SNKRDUNK ~¥14,500 Domestic JPN Platform verified
Mercari ~¥13,500-15,000 Varies Check seller rating

For international collectors, Japanese Inferno X boxes are available through specialized importers who ship directly from Japan with tracking and authenticity guarantees. Buying from an established Japan-based seller ensures you receive genuine product with intact shrink wrap — a detail that matters for both opening and sealed collecting. At Samurai Sword, every box is serial-tracked — if any box is ever found to be searched or resealed, we trace it to the source and permanently ban that supplier.

When purchasing, factor in international shipping (~$10-20) and any import duties in your country.

For a side-by-side comparison of all current Japanese booster boxes, see our Best Japanese Pokemon Booster Boxes 2026 ranking. New to importing? Our complete guide to buying Japanese Pokemon cards covers shipping, customs, and authentication.

View complete Inferno X card list →

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Inferno X?

Each box guarantees 4 RR, 3 AR, and 1 SR (Trainer category). The chase slot gives you roughly a 68% chance of an SR (Pokémon), 30% chance of a SAR, and 2% chance of the MUR. These rates are estimated from aggregate opening data — The Pokémon Company does not officially publish pull rate percentages.

How much is a Mega Charizard X ex MUR worth?

As of March 2026, the MUR trades at approximately ¥110,000 (~$730) on the Japanese secondary market. It has held steady near its launch price of ¥108,000, making it one of the most price-stable chase cards in the MEGA series.

Is Inferno X worth buying in 2026?

For Charizard collectors, yes — the MUR and SAR are iconic cards with strong collector demand. For general collectors, the box offers solid value through guaranteed SR and AR pulls. At ~¥14,000 per box, it’s pricier than other MEGA series sets, but that reflects limited circulation and Charizard demand.

What is the English equivalent of Inferno X?

The English version is Phantasmal Flames, released November 14, 2025. It combines cards from Inferno X with other Japanese sets. Japanese versions of these cards typically trade at a 20-40% premium over their English counterparts.

How many cards are in the Inferno X set?

The main set contains 80 cards, plus 36 secret rares (12 AR, 17 SR, 6 SAR, 1 MUR) for a total of 116 cards.

Will Inferno X cards go up in value?

Past performance is not a guarantee. That said, high-rarity Charizard cards from recent sets have historically trended upward 12-24 months post-release. Non-Charizard cards are less predictable and depend on competitive meta shifts and collector trends.

Should I buy singles or a box?

For specific chase cards like the MUR (¥110,000) or Charizard SAR (¥80,000), singles are more cost-effective than opening boxes at 1-in-50 and 1-in-3 odds. If you enjoy the opening experience and would be happy with any SR-or-above hit, a box gives you guaranteed value through the AR and SR slots plus a shot at something bigger.

Bottom Line

Three things to take away from Inferno X:

  1. The Mega Charizard X ex MUR is a generational chase card — gold finish, brutal 1-in-50 pull rate, and rock-solid pricing at ¥110,000. Historical Charizard chase cards have shown strong collector demand over time.
  2. Box EV runs about 85% of market price, which is strong for Pokémon TCG. Your guaranteed SR and AR pulls provide a baseline, and any SAR hit recovers the box cost and then some.
  3. Five months post-launch, prices have stabilized. The initial correction is done. Current prices represent a reasonable entry point for both singles and sealed product.

Inferno X delivers one of the strongest collecting experiences in the MEGA series — and the data backs it up.

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Migliori set Pokémon giapponesi per principianti 2026

Looking for the best Japanese Pokemon sets for beginners? Japanese booster boxes offer better print quality, higher pull rates, and box prices starting at just $51 — less than half the cost of most English boxes.

We ranked 7 of the best Japanese Pokemon sets for beginners across 5 scoring criteria, sorted by budget tier so you can find the right box whether you have $50 or $150 to spend.

Every price in this guide comes from SNKRDUNK — Japan’s largest authenticated marketplace — updated as of March 2026. Our team at Samurai Sword INC ships 500+ boxes from Tokyo every month, and we have tracked which sets new collectors keep coming back for.

Here is what we cover: why Japanese sets beat English for beginners, our 5 scoring criteria, a quick-comparison table, and detailed reviews of all 7 sets by price tier.

Key Takeaway

Japanese booster boxes start at just $51 (¥7,500) with guaranteed SR+ pulls per box. Our #1 pick for beginners: Nihil Zero — newest set, lowest price, strong availability.

7
Sets Compared

$51–$156
Price Range

3
Budget Tiers

5-Axis
Scoring System

Why Japanese Pokemon Cards Are Perfect for Beginners

Japanese Pokemon sets for beginners offer three advantages that English sets cannot match: superior quality, better pull rates, and a lower price floor.

Superior Print Quality & Art

Japanese cards grade higher than English cards on average. Stronger centering, cleaner edges, and more consistent surface quality give Japanese cards a measurable edge at PSA and CGC. For a beginner building a first collection, starting with cards that hold their condition means better long-term value.

The art itself is another draw. Japanese sets feature exclusive Special Art Rares (SAR) with full-illustration designs by artists like Mitsuhiro Arita and HYOGONOSUKE — artwork that often never appears on English prints. These SARs have become the most collected cards in the modern era, and Japanese versions historically trade at a 15–40% premium over their English equivalents.

Better Pull Rate Structure

Japanese booster boxes contain 30 packs of 5 cards each (150 cards total). English boxes contain 36 packs of 10 cards, but the hit rates differ substantially.

Based on community opening data, a Japanese box is expected to contain at least one SR (Super Rare) or higher per box, with realistic chances at SAR and MUR pulls. (Pull rates are estimated from large-sample openings and are not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.) English boxes follow a different rarity system that many collectors find less generous. For a beginner opening their first sealed product, Japanese boxes deliver a more satisfying experience per dollar spent.

Affordable Entry Point

Here is where Japanese sets really shine for beginners. Current MEGA-era Japanese booster boxes start at approximately $51 (¥7,500) on the secondary market. Compare that to English booster boxes that routinely sell for $100–$150.

Price Comparison

Japanese BOX from $51 vs. English BOX from $100+. You can buy two Japanese boxes for the price of one English box — and get a better opening experience from each.

How We Ranked These Sets — Our 5 Scoring Criteria

Transparency matters. Here is exactly how we scored each set on a 10-point scale across 5 criteria:

Criteria Weight What It Measures
Beginner Friendliness 25% Familiar Pokemon, simple themes, visual appeal for newcomers
Card Art Quality 20% SAR/MUR artwork, illustration variety, display-worthiness
Pull Rate Value 20% Chance of pulling high-rarity cards relative to box price
Price Accessibility 20% Current market price — lower is better for beginners
Set Availability 15% How easy it is to find authentic sealed boxes right now

Each set receives a weighted total score out of 10. We factored in our own sales data (which boxes first-time buyers order most) and opening data from the Japanese collector community. These criteria reflect what matters most when choosing the best Japanese Pokemon sets for beginners — not just card value, but the overall first-time experience.

Quick Comparison — All 7 Sets at a Glance

Rank Set Type Price ($) Score Best For
1 Nihil Zero Expansion ~$51 8.6 Best Overall Value
2 Mega Symphonia Expansion ~$58 8.4 Best Art & Design
3 Mega Dream ex High Class ~$63 8.3 Best First High Class Pack
4 Mega Brave Expansion ~$72 8.1 Best for Lucario Fans
5 Inferno X Expansion ~$99 7.9 Best Charizard Set
6 Terastal Festival ex High Class ~$103 8.2 Best Eeveelution Collection
7 VSTAR Universe High Class ~$156 8.0 Best Premium Experience

Prices: SNKRDUNK secondary market, March 2026. USD at approximately ¥146/USD. Card prices verified via TCGPlayer for English equivalents.

Japanese Pokemon set budget comparison chart showing under $75, $75-110, and $150+ tiers
All 7 sets scored and sorted by budget tier

Best Budget Sets — Under $75

These four sets give beginners the most value per dollar. Each one costs less than a single English booster box.

#1 Nihil Zero — Best Overall Value (~$51 / ¥7,500)

Nihil Zero is the best Japanese Pokemon set for beginners who want maximum cards per dollar.

Nihil Zero Japanese Pokemon booster box — best budget option for beginners
Nihil Zero — #1 Best Overall Value

Released January 2026, this is the newest MEGA-era expansion pack. The set revolves around Mega Zygarde ex and trainer May (Haruka), with May’s SAR currently trading at approximately ¥25,000 ($171). At ¥7,500 per box, that is a 3.3x return on a single pull.

Why beginners love it:

  • Lowest price point of any current expansion (~$51)
  • Fresh set with strong availability — easy to find sealed
  • Popular trainer SARs (May) that hold value
  • Full MEGA-era pull rate structure (SR+ guaranteed per box)

Quick specs: 30 packs × 5 cards | MSRP: ¥5,400 | Market: ~¥7,500 | 83 cards in set

For more on this set’s pull rates and top cards, see our Nihil Zero pull rates guide.

Budget Tier Highlight

All 4 budget sets cost under $75 — less than a single English booster box. At these prices, you can try 2 different Japanese sets for the price of 1 English box.

#2 Mega Symphonia — Best Art & Design (~$58 / ¥8,500)

Mega Symphonia delivers the most visually stunning cards in the current MEGA era — the SARs in this set are gallery-worthy.

Mega Symphonia Japanese Pokemon booster box featuring Mega Gardevoir
Mega Symphonia — #2 Best Art & Design

Built around Mega Gardevoir ex, this set features some of the most praised artwork in modern Pokemon TCG. The Acerola SAR and Gardevoir SAR have become iconic collector pieces. Acerola’s SAR trades at approximately ¥22,000 ($151) as of March 2026.

Why beginners love it:

  • Widely considered the most beautiful set in the MEGA era
  • Gardevoir and Acerola are universally popular characters
  • Strong Art Rare (AR) lineup — even common pulls look great
  • Good price-to-art ratio at ~$58

Quick specs: 30 packs × 5 cards | MSRP: ¥5,400 | Market: ~¥8,500 | 83 cards in set

Read the full breakdown in our Mega Symphonia pull rates guide.

Expansion vs. High Class Pack

Sets #1, #2, and #4 are standard expansion packs (30 packs × 5 cards). Set #3 below is a High Class Pack (10 packs × 10 cards) with boosted pull rates and a curated card pool.

#3 Mega Dream ex — Best First High Class Pack (~$63 / ¥9,200)

Mega Dream ex is the most beginner-friendly High Class Pack ever released — and the most affordable HCP on the market right now.

Mega Dream ex Japanese Pokemon High Class Pack booster box
Mega Dream ex — #3 Best First High Class Pack

High Class Packs (HCPs) are premium sets with boosted pull rates and curated card pools. Mega Dream ex, released November 2025, features cards from across the MEGA era plus exclusive SARs you cannot find in standard expansions. The Charizard ex Master Art (MA) is the set’s crown jewel.

Why beginners love it:

  • Higher pull rates than standard expansion packs
  • Only 10 packs per box, but each pack has better odds
  • “Greatest hits” card pool — familiar Pokemon from multiple sets
  • At ¥9,200 (~$63), it is the cheapest HCP available

Quick specs: 10 packs × 10 cards | MSRP: ¥5,500 | Market: ~¥9,200 | 143 cards in set

For the full card rankings, check our Mega Dream ex pull rates guide and best Japanese High Class Packs guide.

#4 Mega Brave — Best for Lucario Fans (~$72 / ¥10,500)

Mega Brave is the set to buy if Lucario is your favorite Pokemon — Mega Lucario ex headlines this expansion with a chase-worthy MUR (Master Ultra Rare).

Mega Brave Japanese Pokemon booster box featuring Mega Lucario
Mega Brave — #4 Best for Lucario Fans

Released August 2025 alongside Mega Symphonia, Mega Brave launched the MEGA era. The set has matured nicely in the secondary market, with prices stabilizing from their initial premium. Mega Lucario ex MUR trades at approximately ¥48,000 ($329).

Why beginners love it:

  • Lucario is consistently one of the most popular Pokemon worldwide
  • First MEGA-era set — historic significance for collectors
  • Strong MUR chase card with high long-term potential
  • Mature market means stable, fair pricing

Quick specs: 30 packs × 5 cards | MSRP: ¥5,400 | Market: ~¥10,500 | 81 cards in set

Full analysis in our Mega Brave pull rates guide.

Budget Tier Summary

4 sets under $75: Nihil Zero ($51) for value, Mega Symphonia ($58) for art, Mega Dream ex ($63) for HCP experience, Mega Brave ($72) for Lucario fans. Any of these makes an excellent first box.

Best Mid-Range Sets — $75 to $110

These sets cost more but deliver premium chase cards and deeper collector experiences.

#5 Inferno X — Best Charizard Set (~$99 / ¥14,500)

Inferno X is the set every Charizard fan needs. Mega Charizard X ex headlines this expansion with multiple ultra-rare variants.

Inferno X Japanese Pokemon booster box featuring Mega Charizard X
Inferno X — #5 Best Charizard Set

Released September 2025, Inferno X carries a higher price tag than other MEGA-era expansions because Charizard sells. The Mega Charizard X ex MUR is the most expensive card in the MEGA era so far, trading at approximately ¥60,000+ ($411+). Every sealed box carries that lottery ticket.

Why beginners love it:

  • Charizard is the most recognized and collected Pokemon
  • Multiple Charizard variants (MUR, SAR, SR) in one set
  • Strong resale value — Charizard cards rarely lose demand
  • Exciting opening experience with high-ceiling pulls
Budget Tip

The ¥14,500 price tag is about 2× the budget sets above. If your budget allows, this set delivers unmatched excitement. If you want to start smaller, grab a Nihil Zero first and save Inferno X for your second box.

Quick specs: 30 packs × 5 cards | MSRP: ¥5,400 | Market: ~¥14,500 | 83 cards in set

See our Inferno X pull rates guide for the full card rankings.

Mid-Range Value

Inferno X and Terastal Festival ex both sit in the $99–$103 range. The difference? Inferno X is pure Charizard energy. Terastal Fest ex is an Eeveelution collector’s dream. Pick your passion.

#6 Terastal Festival ex — Best Eeveelution Collection (~$103 / ¥15,000)

Terastal Festival ex is the ultimate Eevee fan set — all 9 Eeveelutions receive Special Art Rares in a single High Class Pack.

Terastal Festival ex Japanese Pokemon High Class Pack with all 9 Eeveelution SARs
Terastal Festival ex — #6 Best Eeveelution Collection

This Scarlet & Violet-era High Class Pack (released December 2024) features Umbreon ex SAR at approximately ¥47,000 ($322) as the crown jewel, alongside stunning SARs of Sylveon, Espeon, Glaceon, and all other Eeveelutions. For collectors who love Eevee — and that is a huge portion of the community — no other set comes close.

Why beginners love it:

  • All 9 Eeveelutions in SAR form — a unique collector milestone
  • Umbreon SAR is one of the most valuable modern Pokemon cards
  • High Class Pack pull rates (more generous than standard sets)
  • Eevee is universally beloved — perfect for display collections

Quick specs: 10 packs × 10 cards | MSRP: ¥5,500 | Market: ~¥15,000 | 190 cards in set

Our Terastal Festival ex pull rates guide covers every card in detail.

Best Premium Set — $150+

#7 VSTAR Universe — Best Premium Collector Experience (~$156 / ¥22,800)

VSTAR Universe is the set that turned Japanese Pokemon cards into a global phenomenon — and it still delivers one of the best opening experiences in the hobby.

VSTAR Universe Japanese Pokemon High Class Pack booster box
VSTAR Universe — #7 Best Premium Experience

Released December 2022, this Sword & Shield-era High Class Pack is approaching limited availability. The Pikachu Art Rare — arguably the most iconic modern Pokemon card — trades at approximately ¥21,000 ($144). But the real draw is the God Pack: roughly 1 in 100 boxes contains a pack where every card is an Art Rare. Opening a God Pack is a once-in-a-lifetime collector moment.

Why beginners love it:

  • The Pikachu AR is a grail card for any Pokemon collection
  • God Pack chance (~1%) adds unmatched opening excitement
  • Art Rare lineup features 9 stunning full-art illustrations
  • High Class Pack with generous pull rates across all rarities
Note

At ¥22,800 (~$156), this is the most expensive box on our list. Supply is decreasing as the set approaches out-of-print status. If you can stretch your budget, VSTAR Universe is a set you will not regret owning. Otherwise, start with a budget set and add this to your wishlist.

Quick specs: 10 packs × 10 cards | MSRP: ¥5,500 | Market: ~¥22,800 | 172 cards in set

Read our VSTAR Universe pull rates guide for the complete card breakdown.

What to Know Before Buying Your First Japanese Box

Three things every beginner needs to understand before purchasing.

Pack Structure — JPN vs ENG Differences

Japanese and English Pokemon boxes are not the same product. Here is a quick breakdown:

Feature Japanese Box English Box
Packs per box 30 (standard) / 10 (HCP) 36
Cards per pack 5 (standard) / 10 (HCP) 10
SR+ guarantee Yes (1+ per box) Varies
Language Japanese English
Typical price $50–$160 $100–$180
Japanese vs English Pokemon booster box structure comparison — packs, cards, and price differences
Japanese vs English box comparison at a glance

The language barrier does not matter for collectors. You are buying these cards for the art, the quality, and the thrill of the pull — not to read the attack text. If you do want to play competitively, English cards are required for Western tournaments. For collecting? Japanese is the premium choice.

For a deeper comparison, read our Japanese vs English Pokemon Cards guide.

Japanese Box

  • 30 packs × 5 cards
  • SR+ guaranteed per box
  • From ~$51
  • Premium print quality

English Box

  • 36 packs × 10 cards
  • Varies by set
  • From ~$100
  • Playable in tournaments

How to Spot Fakes — Quick Authentication Guide

Counterfeit Japanese Pokemon cards exist, but they are easy to identify once you know what to look for. Three quick checks:

  1. Texture test — Authentic Japanese holos have a distinct raised texture you can feel with your fingernail
  2. Light test — Hold the card up to a light source. Genuine cards show a thin, even structure. Fakes often appear thicker or uneven
  3. Edge quality — Japanese cards have exceptionally clean edges. Rough or uneven edges are a red flag

Buy from authenticated sellers to eliminate this risk entirely. Our full guide to spotting fake Japanese Pokemon cards covers 10 authentication tests.

Safety First

Never buy Japanese Pokemon boxes from unverified sellers on social media. Stick to authenticated marketplaces and established export shops with tracked shipping and serial-numbered inventory.

Shipping & Customs Basics

Buying Japanese cards from overseas means international shipping. Key points:

  • Shipping time: 7–14 days from Japan to the US/UK/AU via tracked carriers
  • US customs: Pokemon cards under $800 per shipment enter duty-free (de minimis threshold)
  • UK/EU customs: VAT may apply on imports above local thresholds
  • Insurance: Always buy from sellers who offer tracked, insured shipping

For a complete walkthrough, see our guide to buying Japanese Pokemon cards from Japan.

Where to Buy Japanese Pokemon Boxes Online

The safest way to buy authentic Japanese Pokemon booster boxes is through specialized export shops that source directly from Japan.

Samurai Sword INC (samuraiswordtokyo.com) — Our shop ships sealed, shrink-wrapped boxes from Tokyo with tracked delivery. Every box is serial-tracked: if a box is found to be searched or resealed, we can trace it back to the source and ban that supplier. This level of authentication gives you peace of mind that your sealed product is genuinely factory-fresh.

Our Guarantee

Every box ships with a serial number. Searched or resealed? We trace it, ban the supplier, and make it right. 500+ boxes shipped from Tokyo every month.

Other reputable options for finding the best Japanese Pokemon sets for beginners include:

  • Plaza Japan — Established Japanese retailer with international shipping
  • AmiAmi — Japanese hobby shop with competitive pricing

For the latest set news and release announcements, follow PokeBeach and PokeGuardian — both track Japanese releases months before English versions are announced.

When choosing any seller, look for: sealed shrink wrap, tracked shipping, a clear return policy, and verified customer reviews.

All orders ship from Japan with tracking and insurance. View shipping policy → | Customs & duties info →

Questions? Contact us → | Return policy →

The Bottom Line — Our Top 3 Picks

Seven sets, three tiers, one recommendation per budget:

  1. Best starter box: Nihil Zero at ~$51. Maximum value, newest set, strong availability. Grab this one first.
  2. Best upgrade: Terastal Festival ex at ~$103. All 9 Eeveelution SARs in one High Class Pack — a collector milestone.
  3. Best splurge: VSTAR Universe at ~$156. The God Pack chance and Pikachu AR make this a bucket-list box.
Our Pick

No matter which set you choose, Japanese Pokemon cards will deliver a collecting experience that English sets simply cannot match. Better art, better quality, better pull rates — and often at a lower price. Start with one box. You will understand why collectors worldwide are going Japanese.

Shop Our Collection
Japanese Pokemon Booster Boxes
From ~$51 / ~¥7,500
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery · Serial-tracked

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Japanese Pokemon set for a complete beginner?

Nihil Zero is our top pick for complete beginners. At approximately $51 (¥7,500), it is the most affordable current expansion pack, features the full MEGA-era pull rate structure with SR+ guaranteed per box, and is widely available as a January 2026 release. The set includes popular trainer SARs that hold strong value on the secondary market.

Are Japanese Pokemon cards worth buying if I cannot read Japanese?

For collectors, language does not matter at all. You are collecting for the artwork, print quality, and rarity — not to read the card text. Japanese cards grade higher on average at PSA due to better centering and edge quality. The only scenario where language matters is competitive play: Western tournaments require English-language cards.

How much does a Japanese Pokemon booster box cost?

Current MEGA-era Japanese booster boxes range from approximately $51 to $99 (¥7,500–¥14,500) on the secondary market as of March 2026. High Class Packs range from $63 to $156 (¥9,200–¥22,800). These prices are from SNKRDUNK, Japan’s largest authenticated trading card marketplace. All boxes sell above their MSRP of ¥5,400–¥5,500 because retail availability is extremely limited.

What is a High Class Pack and should beginners buy one?

High Class Packs (HCPs) are premium Japanese sets with boosted pull rates and curated card pools drawn from multiple standard expansions. They contain 10 packs of 10 cards (vs. 30 packs of 5 in standard sets). HCPs cost more per box but offer better odds at rare pulls. For beginners, Mega Dream ex (~$63) is an excellent first HCP because it combines accessible pricing with premium pull rates. Read our best High Class Packs guide for a full comparison.

How do I know if a Japanese Pokemon box is authentic?

Look for three things: factory-applied shrink wrap with even, tight seals; correct pack count (30 for standard, 10 for HCP); and purchase from a verified seller with tracked shipping. At Samurai Sword INC, every box receives a serial number — if any box is found to be tampered with, we trace it back to the supplier. For a detailed authentication process, see our fake detection guide.

Should I buy Japanese or English Pokemon cards as a beginner?

For collecting, Japanese cards offer superior print quality, exclusive artwork, higher pull rates per box, and lower entry prices ($51 vs. $100+). For competitive play, you need English cards for Western tournaments. Most beginners start with Japanese boxes for collecting and add English cards later if they want to play. Our Japanese vs English comparison breaks down every difference.

What Pokemon card set should I buy coming from Pokemon TCG Pocket?

If Pokemon TCG Pocket sparked your interest in physical cards, Japanese booster boxes are the natural next step. The digital pulls you love translate directly to real cards with even better artwork. Start with Nihil Zero or Mega Symphonia for an affordable first box. Our Pocket to physical cards guide walks you through the transition step by step.


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Authentic sealed products shipped directly from Tokyo, Japan with tracking & insurance via FedEx.

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Tassi di Uscita e Migliori Carte VSTAR Universe [s12a]

Ninety secret rares. A legendary god pack hiding Pikachu in roughly 1 out of every 100 boxes. And a box price that has climbed over 400% above MSRP since going out of print.

VSTAR Universe (s12a) closed the Sword & Shield era in December 2022 and immediately earned a reputation as the greatest High Class Pack ever produced. Three years later, sealed boxes trade at ¥22,800 (~$150) on SNKRDUNK — and they keep rising.

Here you’ll find the exact pull rates per box, the 10 most valuable cards with current market prices, how the god pack works, a full box EV breakdown, and a clear answer on whether VSTAR Universe is worth your money in 2026. Our team handles Japanese sealed product daily from our Tokyo warehouse, and we track these prices across SNKRDUNK, Mercari, and PriceCharting every week.

Key Takeaway

VSTAR Universe packs 90 secret rares into a single set, guarantees a SAR in every box, and offers a ~1% shot at the legendary god pack. Three years after release, sealed boxes have appreciated 300%+ and show no signs of slowing down.

¥22,800
Box Price

262
Total Cards

90
Secret Rares

~1%
God Pack

VSTAR Universe — Set Overview

This set is the final High Class Pack of the Sword & Shield era and the spiritual successor to Shiny Star V and VMAX Climax. With 172 main set cards plus 90 secret rares (262 total), it packs more chase cards into a single set than almost any Japanese release before or since.

Release Info, Price & Pack Contents

Spec Detail
Set Name VSTAR Universe (VSTARユニバース)
Set Code s12a
Series Sword & Shield — High Class Pack
Release Date December 2, 2022
MSRP ¥5,500 (tax included) → Market price: ¥22,800 (~$150)
Packs per Box 10
Cards per Pack 10
Total Cards 262 (172 main + 90 secret rares)

Prices as of March 2026. Secondary market prices via SNKRDUNK and PriceCharting.

What Makes This Set Special — 90 Secret Rares

Most standard Japanese expansions include 10-20 secret rares. This set has 90. That number breaks down into 25 Pokémon SARs, 10 Supporter SARs, 37 ARs, 14 SRs, and 4 Ultra Rares — each featuring exclusive artwork you won’t find in any other set.

The four UR cards form an interconnected panoramic illustration of Origin Forme Dialga, Origin Forme Palkia, Giratina, and Arceus — the Sinnoh creation quartet rendered in gold. These panoramic URs have become some of the most iconic cards in the modern era.

VSTAR Universe s12a Japanese booster box sealed with shrink wrap
VSTAR Universe (s12a) sealed booster box

JPN Version vs Crown Zenith

Crown Zenith, released in English in January 2023, adapts a portion of s12a’s card pool but is not a direct translation. Key differences:

  • Crown Zenith combines cards from VSTAR Universe, Paradigm Trigger, and Incandescent Arcana
  • Several JPN-exclusive SARs never appeared in Crown Zenith
  • The god pack mechanic is exclusive to the Japanese version
  • Japanese print quality — texture, holofoil, and card stock — commands a 20-40% price premium over English equivalents
JPN vs ENG

The Japanese VSTAR Universe commands a 20-40% premium over Crown Zenith equivalents. God packs, exclusive SARs, and superior print quality are JPN-only.

If you want the complete s12a experience, only the Japanese original delivers. For a deeper comparison of Japanese vs English Pokémon cards, see our detailed guide.

Top 10 Most Valuable Cards

The top cards from this set have held their value remarkably well for a three-year-old release. The Pikachu AR — locked exclusively behind the god pack — remains the most expensive card, while the four gold UR legendaries dominate the upper tier.

Rank Card Rarity Price (¥) Price (USD)
1 Pikachu #205 AR ~¥21,000 ~$231
2 Giratina VSTAR #261 UR ~¥16,000 ~$156
3 Arceus VSTAR #262 UR ~¥10,000 ~$90
4 Mewtwo VSTAR #221 SAR ~¥11,000 ~$66
5 Origin Forme Dialga VSTAR #260 UR ~¥7,500 ~$65
6 Charizard VSTAR #212 SAR ~¥6,500 ~$63
7 Origin Forme Palkia VSTAR #259 UR ~¥7,000 ~$56
8 Leafeon VSTAR #210 SAR ~¥3,500 ~$36
9 Suicune V #215 SAR ~¥3,000 ~$32
10 Cynthia’s Ambition #239 SAR ~¥4,700 ~$31

Prices as of March 2026. USD via PriceCharting. JPN prices via SNKRDUNK/Mercari.

#1 Pikachu AR — The God Pack Exclusive (~$231 / ¥21,000)

Pikachu Art Rare 205 from VSTAR Universe s12a
Pikachu AR #205 — God pack exclusive

Pikachu AR sits in a category of its own. You cannot pull this card from a normal pack — it only appears inside the god pack, an ultra-rare 9-card Art Rare set that shows up in roughly 1 out of every 100 boxes. That exclusivity, combined with Pikachu’s universal popularity, keeps prices anchored above $200 even three years after release.

The card’s artwork, illustrated by sowsow, depicts Pikachu standing on a rooftop at sunset — a quietly beautiful composition that breaks from the usual action poses. PSA 10 copies trade around $350 on PriceCharting, making it one of the most grading-sensitive cards in the modern era.

For collectors who want to own this card, buying a raw single (~$231) is far more cost-effective than chasing the god pack across 100+ boxes.

#2 Giratina VSTAR UR — The Crown Jewel (~$156 / ¥16,000)

Giratina VSTAR Ultra Rare gold card 261 from VSTAR Universe
Giratina VSTAR UR #261 — Panoramic gold

Giratina VSTAR UR is the centerpiece of the four-card panoramic gold set and the most valuable UR in the entire s12a release. The golden artwork captures Giratina in its Origin Forme, radiating distortion energy. Only about 10% of boxes contain any UR card, and with four UR types in the set, your odds of pulling this specific Giratina are roughly 1 in 40 boxes.

PSA 10 copies have sold for $250+, and raw prices have appreciated steadily since 2023. Giratina was also the dominant competitive Pokémon of the Sword & Shield era, adding play-value nostalgia to its collector appeal.

#3 Arceus VSTAR UR — The Creator (~$90 / ¥10,000)

Arceus VSTAR Ultra Rare gold card 262 from VSTAR Universe
Arceus VSTAR UR #262 — Panoramic gold

Arceus VSTAR UR completes the Sinnoh creation myth alongside Dialga, Palkia, and Giratina. As the “god” Pokémon, Arceus holds deep lore significance that transcends any single card game era. The golden rendering shows Arceus channeling its signature Stardust ability.

Arceus VSTAR was also one of the most versatile competitive decks in the Sword & Shield format, which adds a nostalgia layer for players who remember its dominance. At ~$90, it’s the most affordable of the four UR golds — and arguably the best entry point for collectors building the panoramic set.

#4-10 Quick Hits

Mewtwo VSTAR Special Art Rare 221 from VSTAR Universe s12a

Mewtwo VSTAR SAR
~$66 / ~¥11,000

Charizard VSTAR Special Art Rare 212 from VSTAR Universe s12a

Charizard VSTAR SAR
~$63 / ~¥6,500

Suicune V Special Art Rare 215 from VSTAR Universe s12a

Suicune V SAR
~$32 / ~¥3,000

#4 Mewtwo VSTAR SAR (~$66 / ¥11,000) — Mewtwo facing off in a dramatic battle scene. This card has appreciated significantly over the past year, with buying prices jumping from ¥6,300 to ¥11,000. Mewtwo’s enduring popularity across all Pokémon media drives consistent demand.

#5 Origin Forme Dialga VSTAR UR (~$65 / ¥7,500) — The time-controlling legendary in panoramic gold. Part of the four-card UR set that collectors chase as a complete series.

#6 Charizard VSTAR SAR (~$63 / ¥6,500) — Any set with a Charizard chase card holds long-term collector interest. The SAR artwork shows Charizard mid-flight in a dramatic composition by popular illustrator 5ban Graphics.

Depth Beyond the Top 10

VSTAR Universe has over a dozen cards worth $25+. That depth of value is what separates this set from nearly every other modern release.

#7 Origin Forme Palkia VSTAR UR (~$56 / ¥7,000) — Palkia in panoramic gold, completing the Dialga-Palkia pair. Collectors who own one typically pursue the other.

#8 Leafeon VSTAR SAR (~$36 / ¥3,500) — Fan-favorite Eeveelution with stunning nature-themed artwork. Eeveelution cards have historically held value well across all eras.

#9 Suicune V SAR (~$32 / ¥3,000) — One of the most aesthetically praised SARs in the set. Suicune’s flowing mane and aurora backdrop make this a collector showpiece.

#10 Cynthia’s Ambition SAR (~$31 / ¥4,700) — The iconic Sinnoh Champion rendered in Special Art Rare quality. Trainer SARs featuring popular characters like Cynthia tend to appreciate as sealed supply decreases.

Beyond the top 10, notable honorable mentions include Mew AR #183 (~$30), Charizard V SAR #211 (~$30), and Irida SAR #238 (~$25). That depth — over a dozen cards worth $25+ — is what sets this High Class Pack apart from nearly every other modern release.

For more high-value Japanese cards across all sets, check our 2026 most valuable Japanese Pokémon cards ranking.

Pull Rates & What’s in Your Box

Every box guarantees at least 15 high-rarity pulls — a hallmark of the High Class Pack format that makes s12a one of the most generous sealed products in modern Pokémon TCG. Here’s exactly what to expect.

Guaranteed Pulls per Box

Guaranteed Pull Qty Note
Pokémon SAR 1 25 types — guaranteed
SR (Trainer/Energy) 1 14 types
AR (Art Rare) 3 37 types
K (Radiant) 1 6 types
RRR 3
RR 6

That’s a minimum of 15 hits per box — significantly more than a standard Japanese expansion where you might get 5-6 hits.

SAR, UR & God Pack Probabilities

Beyond the guaranteed pulls, boxes can contain bonus ultra-rare cards:

Pull Probability per Box Specific Card Odds
Pokémon SAR (guaranteed) 100% ~1/25 for a specific SAR (25 types)
Supporter SAR (bonus) ~20% ~1/50 for a specific Supporter SAR (10 types)
UR (Ultra Rare gold) ~10% ~1/40 for a specific UR (4 types)
God Pack (9 AR set) ~1% ~1/100 boxes
“2-Hit Box” (double SAR/UR) ~5-8% Rare bonus

Estimated based on community opening data. Not officially confirmed by The Pokémon Company.

Pull Rate Highlight

5-8% of VSTAR Universe boxes are “2-hit boxes” (2枚箱) — containing two SARs or a SAR plus a UR. That means roughly 1 in 15 boxes delivers an unexpected second premium pull.

The Legendary God Pack — Two Types

VSTAR Universe god pack containing 9 Art Rare cards including Pikachu
God pack — 9 Art Rare cards illustrated by Kouki Saitou

The god pack is this set’s most iconic feature. Instead of the normal 10-card distribution, a god pack replaces most cards with ultra-rare pulls. Two configurations have been confirmed:

At roughly 1 in 100 boxes (~1% probability), god packs are extremely rare. One Japanese card shop reported needing 80 boxes to find one, while another opened 200 and found three. The value of a complete Type 1 god pack exceeds ¥25,000 (~$165) in card value alone — but the true value is the experience of opening one.

God Pack Odds

~1 in 100 boxes. Type 1 (9 AR set with Pikachu) is the only way to pull the ¥21,000 Pikachu AR. Type 2 (5 SAR + 5 AR) delivers equal excitement without the Pikachu exclusive.

Box EV Breakdown

At approximately $65 expected value per $150 box (~44% return), VSTAR Universe fares better than most modern sets thanks to its high guaranteed hit count and bonus pull chances. Negative EV is the standard structure for every Pokémon TCG box — here’s how this set’s math works.

Expected Value Calculation

Component Qty Avg. Value (USD) Contribution
Pokémon SAR (guaranteed) 1 ~$20 $20.00
SR (Trainer/Energy) 1 ~$5 $5.00
AR (Art Rare) 3 ~$4 $12.00
K / Radiant 1 ~$3 $3.00
RRR 3 ~$1.50 $4.50
RR 6 ~$0.75 $4.50
Bulk (C/U/R) ~75 ~$0.02 $1.50
Subtotal (Guaranteed) $50.50
UR (10% chance × ~$90 avg) 0.1 ~$90 $9.00
Supporter SAR (20% × ~$22 avg) 0.2 ~$22 $4.40
God Pack (1% × ~$165 value) 0.01 ~$165 $1.65
Total Expected Value ~$65.55
EV Summary

Box cost: ~$150 | EV: ~$65 | EV ratio: ~44%. The guaranteed SAR + 3 ARs provide a solid base value that prevents any box from being a complete miss.

Variance & What Most Boxes Look Like

The average box returns about 44 cents per dollar — a typical ratio for Pokémon TCG sealed product. But averages hide the real story.

A “floor box” (the most common outcome) contains one mid-tier Pokémon SAR worth $10-15, one SR Energy worth $3-5, three common ARs worth $2-4 each, and various lower-rarity cards — totaling roughly $35-45.

A “ceiling box” with a Giratina VSTAR UR ($156) plus a guaranteed SAR delivers $180+ in card value from a $150 box. Hit the god pack, and a single box can return $300+.

Singles vs Box — Which Path Makes Sense?

Factor Buy Box Buy Singles
Cost for specific card $150 + luck Market price of that card
Experience Opening thrill, surprise pulls No surprises
Value for money ~44% EV return 100% — you get exactly what you pay for
Upside potential God pack, UR pull None
Collector experience Priceless

If you want a specific card — say the Pikachu AR — buying the single at $231 is objectively smarter than opening 100 boxes at $15,000. But if you want the joy of opening a premium Japanese product with guaranteed hits in every box, this set delivers one of the best opening experiences in Pokémon TCG history.

Should You Buy VSTAR Universe in 2026?

Three years after release, this set remains one of the most rewarding Japanese boxes you can open. Here’s who should consider it — and who should look elsewhere.

VSTAR Universe four gold Ultra Rare panoramic cards Dialga Palkia Giratina Arceus
The four gold UR panoramic set — Dialga, Palkia, Giratina, Arceus

For Collectors — The Definitive Sword & Shield Experience

This set is the crown jewel of the Sword & Shield era. If you collect Japanese Pokémon cards, this set belongs on your shelf for three reasons:

  1. Unmatched chase card density — 90 secret rares means every box delivers genuinely exciting pulls
  2. Iconic artwork — The gold panoramic UR set and SAR illustrations represent peak modern Pokémon card design
  3. God pack potential — No other set offers this mechanic with the same level of collectible appeal

At $150 per box, the price has climbed from the ¥5,500 MSRP days, but you’re buying a sealed product from a set that will never be reprinted. Every box opened reduces the global sealed supply.

Buying Advice

For collectors, VSTAR Universe at ¥22,800 is a premium but justified purchase. For investors, monitor the sealed market for a stable entry point above ¥20,000 — if prices hold through 2026, that floor is likely established.

For Investors — Long-Term Sealed Potential

This High Class Pack is often compared to Hidden Fates and Ultra Shiny GX as a potential long-term hold. The bull case: it’s the definitive Sword & Shield era capstone with 90 secret rares, Pikachu/Charizard chase cards, and no future reprints.

The reality check: this set had a massive print run. Many collectors stashed sealed boxes specifically because they expected price appreciation, which means sealed supply isn’t as constrained as older sets. Prices have steadily climbed — from ¥8,000 in early 2023 to ¥22,800 in March 2026 — but the trajectory may flatten as SV-era High Class Packs compete for attention.

For Players — Nostalgia Over Competitiveness

Cards from this set belong to the Sword & Shield era, which has rotated out of competitive Standard play. If you’re building competitive decks, this isn’t your set. But if you played during the VSTAR era and want to own beautifully illustrated versions of cards you once used — Arceus VSTAR, Giratina VSTAR, Origin Forme Palkia VSTAR — there’s deep sentimental value here.

For a full comparison of what makes Japanese cards different, see our Japanese vs English Pokémon cards guide.

Where to Buy VSTAR Universe

Authenticity is critical for any out-of-print Japanese box — resealed product circulates widely on secondary markets. Here are the most reliable channels.

Authenticity Warning

Out-of-print Japanese boxes are frequent targets for resealing. Always verify factory-original shrink wrap, check seller history, and buy from sellers with verifiable Japan-sourced inventory.

Recommended Shops

Samurai Sword INC (samuraiswordtokyo.com) — Ships sealed VSTAR Universe boxes directly from Tokyo. Every box is serial-tracked for authenticity, and we inspect each unit before shipping. If a box shows signs of search or reseal, we trace it back to the supplier and ban them from our network. Tracked international shipping to US, CA, UK, AU, and more.

Other options include eBay (check seller ratings carefully — resealed boxes are common with out-of-print sets), TCG Republic, and Japan-based proxy services. For a complete guide to buying from Japan, see our how to buy Japanese Pokémon cards guide.

When buying out-of-print Japanese boxes, always verify:

  • Shrink wrap is factory-original (not re-wrapped)
  • Seller has verifiable Japan-sourced inventory
  • Return policy exists for tampered products

For tips on spotting fakes, check our fake Japanese Pokémon cards guide.

The Bottom Line

This set earned its reputation. Three years after release, it remains the benchmark against which every Japanese High Class Pack is measured.

Three things to remember:

  1. Best-in-class chase card density — 90 secret rares, guaranteed SAR per box, and the legendary god pack make every opening session exciting
  2. Prices are established and climbing — At ¥22,800 (~$150), the box has appreciated 300%+ from launch and shows no signs of reversing
  3. The god pack is real, and it’s spectacular — A ~1% chance at pulling Pikachu AR and 8 coordinated Art Rares is the ultimate collector moment

Whether you’re adding to a Sword & Shield collection, hunting your first god pack, or looking for a premium Japanese box to open with friends, VSTAR Universe delivers. It’s earned the “greatest High Class Pack” title — and the market agrees.

For a comparison with other top Japanese High Class Packs, see our complete HCP ranking.

Looking for the best box across all set types? Check our best Japanese Pokemon booster box guide for a full comparison.

Shop This Set
VSTAR Universe (s12a) Booster Box
From ~$150 / ~¥22,800
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

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View complete Vstar Universe card list →

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for VSTAR Universe?

Every VSTAR Universe box guarantees 1 Pokémon SAR, 1 SR, 3 Art Rares, 1 Radiant Pokémon, 3 RRR, and 6 RR cards. Beyond guaranteed pulls, there’s roughly a 10% chance of a UR (gold) card, 20% chance of a bonus Supporter SAR, and approximately 1% chance of a god pack. These rates are estimated from community opening data — official rates have not been published by The Pokémon Company.

Is VSTAR Universe the same as Crown Zenith?

No. Crown Zenith (English, released January 2023) adapts some VSTAR Universe cards but combines them with cards from Paradigm Trigger and Incandescent Arcana. Several s12a SARs are exclusive to the Japanese version and were never printed in English. The god pack mechanic is also exclusive to the Japanese set.

What is the most expensive card in VSTAR Universe?

Pikachu AR #205 at approximately $231 (¥21,000) as of March 2026. This card is exclusive to the god pack — a rare 9-card Art Rare set that appears in roughly 1 out of every 100 boxes. PSA 10 graded copies trade around $350. The second most valuable card is Giratina VSTAR UR #261 at approximately $156 (¥16,000).

How rare is the Pikachu AR in VSTAR Universe?

Extremely rare. The Pikachu AR only appears inside god packs, which have an estimated probability of roughly 1 in 100 boxes (1%). Since you can’t pull Pikachu AR from a normal pack, the only alternatives are buying the single card (~$231) or purchasing the complete AR 9-card set. One Japanese card shop reported opening 200 boxes and finding only three god packs.

What is a god pack in VSTAR Universe?

A god pack replaces the normal 10-card pack distribution with ultra-rare cards. Two types exist: Type 1 contains 9 coordinated Art Rares illustrated by Kouki Saitou (including Pikachu AR), and Type 2 contains 5 SARs plus 5 Art Rares. God packs appear in approximately 1 out of every 100 boxes. They’re the rarest and most exciting pull possible in VSTAR Universe.

Is VSTAR Universe still worth buying in 2026?

For collectors, yes. At ¥22,800 (~$150), you’re buying a sealed, out-of-print High Class Pack with 90 secret rares and the best god pack mechanic in Pokémon TCG history. Every box guarantees a SAR pull, and the opening experience is unmatched. For pure investment purposes, be aware that this set had a large print run, which may moderate long-term appreciation compared to older sets with smaller supply.

Will VSTAR Universe be reprinted?

Very unlikely. The set completed its print run during the Sword & Shield era, which ended in 2023. The Pokémon Company has moved fully to the Scarlet & Violet era product line. No official reprint has been announced, and the set’s out-of-print status is a key driver of its current ¥22,800 box price.


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Related Guides

S10B Pokémon GO probabilità di trovare carte, Migliori carte e guida alla box (2026)

The Japanese S10B Pokemon GO set has one card that doesn’t exist in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) release: the Mewtwo V Special Art at 074/071, currently trading at ¥13,000–17,800 (~$85–120) on altema.jp. That single difference is why Mewtwo collectors who care about alt art chase the Japanese box specifically — and why S10B continues to hold premium pricing 3.5 years after its June 2022 launch.

S10B is the only Pokemon TCG set ever built around the Pokemon GO mobile game crossover. It introduced four Radiant Pokemon (Venusaur, Blastoise, Charizard, and Eevee), the peelable Ditto gimmick that hides Ditto under common Pokemon cards, and a pack structure that guarantees two holos per pack instead of the usual one. The set has been out of print for over two years, and the 2026 Pokemon 30th anniversary has pulled renewed attention toward Kanto-focused releases like this one.

This guide breaks down the full S10B picture: all 10 most valuable cards ranked by JPN market prices, pull rate estimates translated from Japanese opening compilations, box EV math using Altema data, the JPN vs ENG differences that matter, and a 3.5-year price trajectory showing why Card Rush is buying boxes at ¥14,000 while SNKRDUNK’s lowest listing sits at ¥21,800. We handle Japanese Pokemon TCG boxes every week — here’s what we tell buyers asking about Pokemon GO.

Key Takeaway

S10B Pokemon GO is the only Pokemon TCG set with the Mewtwo V Special Art (074/071), a JPN-exclusive card that doesn’t exist in the English PGO release. At ~$100/box with four guaranteed Radiant Kanto Pokemon and a ~20% chance per box of any SA, S10B offers one of the most reliable EV floors in the Sword & Shield era. Out of print since late 2023.

~$120
Top Card (Mewtwo V SA)

~$100
BOX Market Price

20 Packs
Per Box (6 cards each)

93 Cards
Total Set

What Is S10B Pokemon GO? Set Overview

S10B Pokemon GO is the Japanese enhanced expansion pack (強化拡張パック) released on June 17, 2022, designed as a direct crossover with the Pokemon GO mobile game. The set brought Pokemon GO’s visual identity — Team Leaders, raid mechanics, candy rewards — into the physical TCG for the only time in the game’s history.

Set Specs

Detail Value
Set Code S10B
Japanese Name ポケモンGO
Series Sword & Shield
Category Enhanced Expansion Pack (強化拡張パック)
Release Date June 17, 2022
Packs per Box 20
Cards per Pack 6 (2 holos guaranteed)
Main Set 71 cards
Secret Rares 22 cards (12 SR incl. 2 SA, 7 HR, 3 UR)
Total Cards 93
MSRP ¥5,200 → Market price: ¥14,000–21,800 (~$93–145) as of April 2026

Enhanced Expansion Pack Structure

Enhanced expansion packs like S10B sit between regular expansion packs (standard S11 or S12) and premium high-class packs like VSTAR Universe. Three things distinguish them: 20 packs per box instead of 30, 6 carte per pack instead of 5, and a guaranteed two-holo pack structure that puts a Pokemon V-or-better card in every single pack alongside a reverse holo. That’s 40 holo cards per box, not 20.

The trade-off: the total card pool is smaller (71 main + 22 secrets = 93 cards vs. 127 for S11), and only one SR-or-higher is guaranteed per box instead of the 1.2+ average from regular expansions. But the double-holo pack structure makes every pack feel like a “hit pack,” which is why enhanced expansions tend to be the most fun boxes to open for casual buyers.

Pokemon GO Theme and the Peelable Ditto

S10B isn’t just themed around Pokemon GO — it mechanically borrows from it. Team leaders Candela, Spark, and Blanche appear as Trainer cards with full-art SR treatments. Professor Willow, the game’s researcher, gets his own HR. Lure Modules and Egg Incubators appear as UR Trainer items. Even the card backs carry Pokemon GO visual motifs.

The set’s fan-favorite gimmick is the peelable Ditto. A handful of S10B commons feature Ditto hidden beneath the surface art — collectors can peel back a thin top layer to reveal a Ditto portrait underneath. For open-sealed collectors, the peelable Ditto is one of the most unique gimmicks in modern Japanese Pokemon TCG history.

Why S10B Still Matters in 2026

Three reasons: the set has been out of print since late 2023, Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 has renewed demand for Kanto-focused releases (S10B is Kanto-dense — Mewtwo, Charizard, Blastoise, Venusaur all get headline spots), and the Japanese version contains two Special Art cards (Mewtwo V SA and Conkeldurr V SA) that simply do not exist in the English PGO release. For Mewtwo collectors, the JPN S10B box is the only sealed product in existence that can pull a Mewtwo V Special Art.

JPN Exclusive

The Mewtwo V SA (074/071) and Conkeldurr V SA (076/071) are Japanese-only Special Art cards. Neither has an equivalent in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) set. For Mewtwo master collectors worldwide, the JPN S10B box is the only sealed product that can produce a Mewtwo V Special Art.

Top 10 Most Valuable S10B Pokemon GO Cards

Mewtwo V SA sits at the top of this set’s value chart at roughly 4× the price of the second-most valuable card. The top 10 below uses current JPN market data from Altema (April 2026), with USD conversions at approximately ¥150/USD.

Mewtwo V SA 074/071 Special Art from S10B Pokemon GO — the JPN-exclusive chase card
Mewtwo V SA (074/071) — ¥13,000–17,800 (~$85–120)
Rank Card Number Rarity JPN Price (¥) USD Price
1 Mewtwo V (Special Art) 074/071 SR (SA) ¥13,000–17,800 ~$85–120
2 Mewtwo VSTAR 091/071 UR ¥6,500–8,980 ~$43–60
3 Mewtwo VSTAR 084/071 HR ¥4,000–5,980 ~$27–40
4 Dragonite VSTAR 086/071 HR ¥3,000–3,780 ~$20–25
5 Radiant Charizard 011/071 K ¥2,700–3,580 ~$18–24
6 Mewtwo V 073/071 SR ¥2,000–2,780 ~$13–18
7 Conkeldurr V (Special Art) 076/071 SR (SA) ¥1,580–1,980 ~$10–13
8 Radiant Blastoise 018/071 K ¥1,500–1,980 ~$10–13
9 Dragonite V 078/071 SR ¥1,300–1,780 ~$9–12
10 Radiant Eevee 040/071 K ¥1,200–1,580 ~$8–10
Price Note

Prices from altema.jp, SNKRDUNK, and Card Rush as of April 2026. USD conversions at ~¥150/USD. Secondary market prices. JPN cards typically trade at a 15–40% premium over English equivalents for high-demand cards.

#1 Mewtwo V SA (074/071) — ~$85–120

The Mewtwo V Special Art is the card that defines S10B for Japanese collectors. Illustrated as a full-bleed portrait with Mewtwo in a meditative pose against a deep purple void, it’s the only Japanese full-art Mewtwo V in the entire Sword & Shield era. The card trades at ¥13,000–17,800 on altema.jp as of April 2026, with Card Rush’s buy price at ¥8,980.

Here’s the important detail no English guide mentions: this card does not exist in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) set. The English release has a Mewtwo V #30 (standard full art) and Mewtwo VSTAR alternate arts, but there’s no equivalent to the Japanese 074/071 Special Art treatment. For Mewtwo master set collectors, chasing the JPN S10B box is the only path.

PSA 10 copies trade at a meaningful premium — recent sales data from PriceCharting shows graded copies in the $180–220 range, giving graders roughly a 2× return on the raw cost. Mewtwo has unmatched collector staying power (Kanto original, anime icon, Pokemon GO raid boss, 30th anniversary headliner), which is why this card has held above $80 for most of 2024 and 2025 despite broader S10B price movement.

#2 Mewtwo VSTAR UR (091/071) — ~$43–60

Mewtwo VSTAR UR 091/071 gold rare from S10B Pokemon GO
Mewtwo VSTAR UR (091/071) — ¥6,500–8,980 (~$43–60)

The gold-textured Ultra Rare Mewtwo VSTAR at ¥6,500–8,980 (~$43–60) is S10B’s highest-numbered secret rare and the set’s premier display card. The gold leafing treatment on a Mewtwo illustration hits different than standard rainbow rares — the metallic backdrop makes Mewtwo’s psychic energy glow with a warmth that collectors keep in the top slot of binders. PSA 10 copies trade around $80–110.

#3 Mewtwo VSTAR HR (084/071) — ~$27–40

The Mewtwo VSTAR Hyper Rare at ¥4,000–5,980 uses a rainbow rare treatment over a dynamic Star Raid VSTAR Power composition. It’s a more accessible Mewtwo VSTAR display card than the UR version and pairs well alongside the SA at ~$27–40 per copy. For buyers who want “a Mewtwo VSTAR special rare” without paying UR prices, the HR is the value pick.

#4 Dragonite VSTAR HR (086/071) — ~$20–25

Dragonite VSTAR HR 086/071 rainbow rare from S10B Pokemon GO
Dragonite VSTAR HR (086/071) — ¥3,000–3,780 (~$20–25)

The Dragonite VSTAR HR at ¥3,000–3,780 (~$20–25) is the Kanto community’s other headline chase. Dragonite consistently ranks as one of the most beloved non-starter Kanto Pokemon, and S10B is one of the only modern sets that gives Dragonite a VSTAR treatment. The HR artwork uses a sunset-orange background that makes it a standout display card.

#5 Radiant Charizard (011/071) — ~$18–24

Radiant Charizard 011/071 from S10B Pokemon GO — the accessible chase
Radiant Charizard (011/071) — ¥2,700–3,580 (~$18–24)

Radiant Charizard is the card that pulls casual collectors into the S10B box. At ¥2,700–3,580 (~$18–24), it’s the most accessible “grail” pull in the set — and because Radiants appear at roughly 1–2 per box, every Pokemon GO box opener has realistic odds of pulling this Charizard on their first try. The shiny gold-accented illustration pairs Charizard against a flame backdrop using the shiny-Pokemon color palette rather than standard orange.

Radiant Charizard is one of four Radiant Pokemon in S10B (alongside Radiant Venusaur, Radiant Blastoise, and Radiant Eevee) — the first Radiant cards ever printed. For Charizard collectors specifically, this was the first “shiny Charizard” treatment in Sword & Shield.

#6 Mewtwo V SR (073/071) — ~$13–18

The standard full-art Mewtwo V SR at ¥2,000–2,780 is the baseline Mewtwo V pull — not the Special Art, but still carrying Mewtwo’s full collector premium. This is the SR version of the same Mewtwo V that appears in the main set as RR. Recommended for Mewtwo completionists who don’t want to spend $100+ on the SA.

#7 Conkeldurr V SA (076/071) — ~$10–13

Conkeldurr V SA 076/071 Special Art from S10B Pokemon GO — JPN-exclusive
Conkeldurr V SA (076/071) — the second JPN-exclusive Special Art

The second JPN-exclusive Special Art in S10B. Conkeldurr doesn’t have Mewtwo’s cultural star power, but the SA treatment at ¥1,580–1,980 (~$10–13) makes this card unique to Japanese collectors. There is no English equivalent to this card in the PGO set. For SA completionists who want both JPN-exclusive alt arts, Conkeldurr V SA is the lower-profile counterpart to Mewtwo V SA.

Cards #8–10

  • Radiant Blastoise (018/071) (¥1,500–1,980 / ~$10–13) — The Kanto starter alongside Venusaur and Charizard as Radiants. Uses the shiny blue-white color treatment over the classic Kanto #009 design.
  • Dragonite V SR (078/071) (¥1,300–1,780 / ~$9–12) — The standard full-art Dragonite V SR. Pairs with the Dragonite VSTAR HR for Kanto pseudo-legendary collectors.
  • Radiant Eevee (040/071) (¥1,200–1,580 / ~$8–10) — The fourth and final Radiant in S10B. Eevee consistently has the broadest collector base in Pokemon, and this card is a common binder-staple for Eevee main collectors.

For the complete S10B card list with all 93 cards, see our S10B Pokemon GO Lista carte page.

Should You Buy a Pokemon GO Booster Box?

At ~$100 USD per box, S10B sits below S11 Lost Abyss and S12 Paradigm Trigger in absolute price — but the EV math and buying decision work differently because of the enhanced expansion pack structure and the JPN-exclusive SA cards. Here’s how it breaks down by buyer type.

Buyer’s Tip

If you want the Mewtwo V SA specifically, buying the single at ~$85–120 is far cheaper than chasing through boxes (estimated ~25 boxes for a specific SA pull). But if you want the full S10B experience with multiple Radiants, Conkeldurr V SA, and a realistic chance at Mewtwo V SA, 2–5 boxes deliver the best balance.

For Pokemon GO Fans and Kanto Collectors

This is the most straightforward “yes” in the Pokemon TCG catalog. If you played Pokemon GO during the 2016–2022 peak, S10B is the only physical TCG set ever built around the mobile game’s visual identity. The Team Leaders (Candela, Spark, Blanche) are here in full art. Professor Willow is here. Lure Modules and Egg Incubators are tangible collectibles. And the set’s Kanto focus — Mewtwo, Charizard, Blastoise, Venusaur, Dragonite, Eevee — makes it one of the densest Kanto sets in Sword & Shield.

For Kanto-focused collectors, the four Radiants alone justify the box purchase. With 1–2 Radiants per box and four types in rotation, opening a full box typically delivers two Radiant Kanto Pokemon as display pieces.

For Mewtwo V SA Chasers

Here’s where the math gets interesting. Mewtwo V SA trades at ~$85–120 raw. A box at ~$100 has roughly 4% odds of pulling it directly — meaning the expected cost to chase the SA through boxes is around $2,500, or 25 boxes. For pure Mewtwo V SA hunters, buying the single is far cheaper.

But the chase changes if you also want the other JPN exclusives and Radiants. Opening 3–5 boxes gives you realistic odds on Conkeldurr V SA, a Mewtwo VSTAR UR, multiple Radiants, and a chance at the Mewtwo V SA — all alongside the pack-opening experience. For completionists building a full S10B Mewtwo collection, a small number of boxes can be the better path than buying six singles separately.

For Long-Term Holders

S10B has been out of print since late 2023. Card Rush’s current buy price of ¥14,000 reflects dealer confidence that boxes will continue to appreciate — dealers typically buy at 60–70% of their expected resale. At ¥14,000 buy and ¥21,800 SNKRDUNK lowest, the dealer-to-retail gap is consistent with appreciating sealed products in the Sword & Shield era.

The 2026 Pokemon 30th anniversary is a tailwind. Kanto-themed sets are seeing renewed attention across the board, and S10B’s four Kanto Radiants plus Mewtwo V SA put it squarely in the anniversary-driven demand zone.

Singles vs. Box — The Math

Approach Cost What You Get
Buy Mewtwo V SA single ~$85–120 The exact card, guaranteed
Buy 5 boxes for JPN exclusives ~$500 ~10 Radiants, 5+ SRs, ~50% chance at Mewtwo V SA, ~50% chance at Conkeldurr V SA, 1–2 VSTAR URs/HRs, 600 total cards
Buy 1 box for the experience ~$100 20 packs, 40 guaranteed holos, ~1–2 Radiants, 1 SR-or-higher

If you only want one specific card, singles win. If you want the full S10B experience with a realistic shot at JPN exclusives and multiple Radiants, 2–5 boxes deliver the best value.

S10B Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

S10B follows the enhanced expansion pack pull structure: 20 packs per box, 6 carte per pack, with 2 holos guaranteed per pack. That’s 40 holo cards per box — roughly twice the density of a standard 30-pack expansion. Here’s how the high-rarity pool breaks down.

Pull Rate Breakdown (Per Box — 20 Packs)

Rarity Cards in Set Expected per Box Notes
RR (V) ~12 3–4 Pokemon V cards
RRR ~6 ~1 Mewtwo VSTAR, Melmetal VMAX, Dragonite VSTAR
K (Radiant) 4 1–2 Venusaur, Blastoise, Charizard, Eevee
SR 12 (incl. 2 SA) 1 guaranteed 10 standard SRs + 2 SAs
SA (any) 2 ~1 per 5 boxes (~20%) Mewtwo V SA or Conkeldurr V SA
Mewtwo V SA 1 ~1 per 25 boxes (~4%) Split 50/50 with Conkeldurr V SA
HR 7 ~1 per 10 boxes (~10%) Rainbow rare treatment
UR 3 ~1 per 10 boxes (~10%) Mewtwo VSTAR, Egg Incubator, Lure Module
Disclaimer

Pull rates are estimated from Japanese community opening compilations and baseline enhanced expansion pack structure. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company. Actual results vary.

Enhanced Expansion Pack Guarantee

Every S10B box guarantees at least one SR-tier card (SR or higher). Because the SR pool includes both standard full arts and the 2 SAs, each box has roughly 20% odds of the SR slot being an SA — giving you ~1 in 5 chance of walking away with a Mewtwo V SA or Conkeldurr V SA from a single box.

This is why enhanced expansions are popular with casual openers. Unlike high-class packs where the SR slot can be anything across a massive card pool, S10B’s smaller 93-card total concentrates the secret rare odds into a narrower pool. More focus, higher per-box hit rate for any given chase card.

Mewtwo V SA — The Specific Odds

The number Mewtwo collectors want: approximately 4% per box for the Mewtwo V SA specifically, or roughly 1 in 25 boxes. That’s a harder chase than S11’s Giratina V SA (3.8–6.2%) because S10B has two SAs splitting the SA probability, while S11 has four SAs diluting the per-SA rate further.

At carton level (12 boxes at ~$1,200), Japanese opening data suggests roughly 2–3 SA pulls total, with 50/50 split between Mewtwo V SA and Conkeldurr V SA. So one carton gives you about a 60–70% chance of seeing at least one Mewtwo V SA — though the variance is high.

Box EV Breakdown

Using current Altema JPN prices and pull rate estimates, the expected value per box breaks down as follows:

Component Est. Value per Box
1 SR hit (weighted avg. incl. SA probability) ~¥3,200 (~$21)
1–2 Radiant cards ~¥3,500 (~$23)
~1 RRR (VSTAR/VMAX) ~¥800 (~$5)
3–4 RR cards ~¥400 (~$3)
Remaining R/U/C ~¥200 (~$1)
Standard Box EV ~¥8,100 (~$54)
EV Summary

Box cost: ~¥14,000–21,800 ($93–145) | Average EV: ~¥8,100 ($54). The SR-weighted average (~¥3,200) accounts for the 20% SA probability, with Mewtwo V SA’s ~$100 value raising the average meaningfully above the 10 standard SRs. Radiants contribute the second-largest EV component.

S10B’s EV structure differs from S11 and S12 in one important way: the Radiant guarantee provides a ~$20–25 EV floor that standard expansion sets don’t have. For value-conscious openers, this “guaranteed Radiant” mechanic gives S10B one of the most reliable EV floors in the Sword & Shield era. For comparison, see our S11 Lost Abyss guide and S12 Paradigm Trigger guide.

S10B vs English Pokemon GO (PGO)

The English Pokemon GO (PGO) release from July 2022 shares the Pokemon GO theme with Japanese S10B, but the two sets have meaningfully different card structures, numbering systems, and pull odds. For buyers choosing between JPN and ENG versions, the differences matter.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Spec S10B (JPN) PGO (ENG)
Release June 17, 2022 July 1, 2022
Main Set Cards 71 78
Secret Rares 22 (12 SR, 7 HR, 3 UR) ~12 (differently distributed)
Total Cards 93 ~88
Packs per Box 20 36
Cards per Pack 6 (2 holos) 10
Total Cards per Box 120 360
MSRP ¥5,200 ~$144
Language Japanese English

What’s Different in the JPN Version

Three JPN-specific cards don’t exist in the English set: Mewtwo V SA (074/071), Conkeldurr V SA (076/071), and the specific peelable Ditto gimmick treatment. The English PGO set has its own exclusive treatments (Giovanni’s Charisma SR, a different Mewtwo VSTAR alt art, rainbow versions of Radiants), but the Mewtwo V Special Art is Japanese-only.

Print quality is another factor. JPN Pokemon cards historically command a 15–40% premium over ENG versions of the same card, driven by superior holofoil textures, tighter print cuts, and the collector preference for original-language releases. For high-value SAs like Mewtwo V, this premium tends toward the higher end.

JPN Premium

The Mewtwo V SA (074/071) is Japanese-only. No English equivalent exists in the PGO set. For Mewtwo master set collectors, the JPN S10B box is the only sealed product in existence that can produce a Mewtwo V Special Art.

Which Version to Buy

  • Chasing Mewtwo V SA specifically? → JPN S10B box is the only option. The card doesn’t exist in English.
  • Want higher pull odds per dollar? → ENG PGO gives you 360 cards per box at a similar box price. More raw pulls, lower per-box SR ceiling.
  • Collecting both language versions? → Buy both. The sets are complementary rather than redundant.
  • Building a Japanese master set? → JPN S10B is required. No substitute exists.

Most of our international buyers go JPN for one of two reasons: they want the Mewtwo V SA specifically, or they prefer Japanese print quality for long-term holding. For casual openers who just want to pull “the Pokemon GO set,” either version works — but the JPN set is the only one with the peelable Ditto and Special Art cards.

Where to Buy S10B Pokemon GO Booster Box

Authentic sealed S10B boxes remain available through Japanese TCG specialty retailers. Because the set has been out of print for 2+ years and stocks are shrinking, verification matters more now than it did at launch.

What to Look For

  • Factory seal — Authentic S10B boxes have a white Creatures Inc. factory seal. At $100+ price points, resealed boxes are a real concern from unverified sellers.
  • 20 packs per box — Enhanced expansion packs use a 20-pack format, not 30. A box should feel appropriately weighted.
  • Japanese branding — The box should display ポケモンGO with Pokemon Company Japan branding.
  • Seller reputation — Purchase from sellers with a track record in Japanese Pokemon TCG. Ask about sourcing — legitimate boxes come from authorized Japanese distributors, not gray-market importers.

At Samurai Sword Tokyo, we stock sealed Japanese S10B Pokemon GO boxes sourced directly from our Tokyo inventory with tracked international shipping. Stock fluctuates — check our product page for current availability.

Bottom Line

Three things to remember about S10B Pokemon GO:

  1. Mewtwo V SA is the JPN-only chase — the 074/071 Special Art doesn’t exist in the English PGO set. For Mewtwo master collectors, this is a required JPN purchase with no English alternative.
  2. Four Radiant Kanto cards create an accessible chase floor — Radiant Venusaur, Blastoise, Charizard, and Eevee at 1–2 per box means every box opener gets at least one Kanto Radiant display piece. The Radiant guarantee is what makes S10B’s EV floor more reliable than standard expansion sets.
  3. Out of print since late 2023 with 2026 anniversary tailwind — production is finished, sealed supply shrinks with every box opened, and Pokemon’s 30th anniversary has pulled Kanto-focused demand back into the spotlight.

At ~$100 per box, S10B is one of the more accessible premium JPN sealed products in the Sword & Shield era. Whether you open it for the experience, chase the Mewtwo V SA, or hold sealed for long-term appreciation, the set earned its place as the only Pokemon TCG set ever built around the Pokemon GO crossover.

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Pokemon GO (S10B) Booster Box
From ~$100 / ~¥14,000–21,800
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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Pokemon GO S10B?

Each 20-pack box guarantees at least one SR-tier card from a pool of 12 SRs (including 2 Special Arts: Mewtwo V SA and Conkeldurr V SA). SA cards appear in approximately 20% of boxes (~1 in 5 boxes for any SA, ~4% per box for Mewtwo V SA specifically). HR cards appear ~10% of the time, and UR cards also ~10%. Each pack contains 2 guaranteed holos, and Radiant Pokemon appear at 1–2 per box. Pull rates are estimated from Japanese opening data and not officially confirmed.

What is the most expensive card in S10B Pokemon GO?

Mewtwo V SA (074/071) at approximately ¥13,000–17,800 (~$85–120 raw) as of April 2026. PSA 10 copies trade in the $180–220 range. It is a Japanese-exclusive Special Art and does not exist in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) set.

Is the Japanese Pokemon GO booster box worth buying in 2026?

At ~$100 per box, S10B offers one of the most reliable EV floors in the Sword & Shield era thanks to the Radiant Pokemon guarantee (1–2 Kanto Radiants per box at $8–24 each). Expected value averages approximately $54, below box cost — standard for Pokemon TCG sealed products. The value proposition lies in the Mewtwo V SA chase, four Kanto Radiants, and the set’s out-of-print status with 2026 30th anniversary tailwind.

How many packs are in a Pokemon GO S10B booster box?

Each S10B box contains 20 packs, with 6 carte per pack — 120 total cards per box. Every pack guarantees 2 holographic cards, meaning each box delivers 40 holos total. This is the enhanced expansion pack (強化拡張パック) format, which differs from standard 30-pack expansions like S11 or S12.

What’s the difference between Japanese S10B and English Pokemon GO?

S10B (Japanese) has 71 main cards + 22 secret rares = 93 total, with 20 packs per box at 6 carte per pack. English PGO has ~78 main cards and 36 packs per box at 10 carte per pack. The biggest difference: Mewtwo V SA (074/071) and Conkeldurr V SA (076/071) are Japanese-exclusive Special Art cards that don’t exist in the English set. Japanese print quality also carries a historical 15–40% premium over English on matched cards.

How much is Radiant Charizard from Pokemon GO worth?

As of April 2026, the Japanese Radiant Charizard (011/071) from S10B trades at ¥2,700–3,580 (~$18–24 raw). PSA 10 graded copies trade at roughly 2× the raw price. Radiant Charizard is one of four Radiant Pokemon in S10B alongside Venusaur, Blastoise, and Eevee, and is the most popular Radiant due to Charizard’s collector demand.

Is Pokemon GO S10B out of print?

Yes. Production ended in late 2023, and no reprints have been announced or released. Sealed box supply has been shrinking for 2+ years, which is one of the drivers behind the current ¥14,000–21,800 JPN price range. The out-of-print status combined with Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 has pulled renewed attention to Kanto-focused sets like this one.


Related Guides

OP-02 Paramount War: migliori carte, probabilità di pull e guida all'acquisto (2026)

What are the best cards in OP-02 Paramount War, and is this classic set still worth chasing in 2026? Released over three years ago, Paramount War remains one of the most collectible booster sets in the entire ONE PIECE CARD GAME — and for good reason. Built around the Marineford Arc, arguably the most emotionally charged saga in One Piece history, OP-02 features iconic characters at their most dramatic moments: Whitebeard’s final stand, Ace’s sacrifice, and the full force of the Navy’s three Admirals.

The set also holds a special place in OPTCG history as the first to introduce Black color cards and multi-color Leaders, permanently expanding the game’s strategic depth. For collectors, the crown jewel is the Portgas D. Ace Comic Parallel — a card so rare that pulling one from a sealed box requires astronomical luck and roughly $4,000 worth of product.

This guide covers the top 10 most valuable OP-02 cards with current market prices from both Japanese and English markets, real pull rate data sourced from Japanese opening aggregates, a full box value breakdown, and a clear recommendation on box vs singles in 2026. Our team tracks Japanese market data daily through platforms like SNKRDUNK and monitors hundreds of OPTCG box transactions monthly. New to the game? Start with our beginner’s guide to One Piece cards.

Key Takeaway

The Ace Comic Parallel (~$1,195 / ¥101,000) is the crown jewel of OP-02, with pull odds of roughly 1 in 72 boxes. JPN boxes offer significantly better value at ~$80–100 versus EN boxes at $490+.

¥10,780+
JPN Box Price

121+27
Tipi di carte

~1/3
SEC Rate/Box

24
Packs/Box

OP-02 Paramount War — Set Overview

OP-02 Paramount War is one of the most important sets in OPTCG history — the first to add a new color (Black), the first with multi-color Leaders, and the set that captured the entire Marineford War on cardboard. Launched in Japan on November 4, 2022, and internationally on March 10, 2023, it remains a collector favorite three years later.

Set Specs & Release Timeline

Spec Japanese (JPN) English (EN)
Release Date November 4, 2022 March 10, 2023
MSRP ¥5,940 per box ~$100.56 per box
Cards per Pack 6 12
Packs per Box 24 24
Cards per Box 144 288
Total Tipi di carte 121 (+ 27 Alt Arts)

Card type breakdown: 8 Leaders, 45 Commons, 30 Uncommons, 26 Rares, 10 Super Rares, 2 Secret Rares, and 27 Alternate Art cards.

What Made OP-02 Special

Beyond the Marineford storyline, OP-02 was a milestone set for the game’s mechanics:

  • First Black color cards — introducing an entirely new color to deckbuilding
  • First multi-color Leaders — Black/Red, Green/Blue, and Purple/Black combinations opened new archetypes
  • Competitive impact — Edward Newgate and Sanji Leaders reshaped the early meta, with Newgate defining aggressive strategies for multiple formats
OP-02 Paramount War Japanese booster box sealed product
OP-02 Paramount War Japanese booster box

Top 10 Most Valuable OP-02 Cards

The Paramount War set’s value is heavily concentrated in its rarest parallels. Here are the ten most valuable cards as of March 2026, with prices from both EN and JPN markets.

# Card Card # Rarity EN (USD) JPN (JPY)
1 Portgas D. Ace OP02-013 SR-SP ~$1,195 ¥101,000
2 Uta OP02-120 SEC-P ~$253 ¥4,000
3 Edward Newgate OP02-001 L-P ~$132 ¥4,000
4 Kuzan OP02-121 SEC-P ~$35 ¥3,600
5 Borsalino OP02-114 SR-P ~$30 ¥3,300
6 Sanji OP02-026 L-P ~$31 ¥2,800
7 Kuzan OP02-096 SR-P ~$27 ¥2,600
8 Edward Newgate OP02-004 SR-P ~$26 ¥2,500
9 Monkey D. Garp OP02-002 L-P ~$28 ¥2,300

EN prices from PriceCharting and TCGPlayer. JPN prices from SNKRDUNK. Prices as of March 2026.

Portgas D. Ace OP02-013 Comic Parallel

#1 — SP COMIC PARALLEL
Portgas D. Ace (OP02-013)
~$1,195 · JPN: ~¥101,000
The undisputed king of OP-02 and one of the most iconic chase cards in all of OPTCG. A full manga panel reproduction of Ace’s Marineford scene, this card appears in roughly 1 out of every 72 boxes (6 cartons). Ace’s sacrifice gives this card emotional weight that purely gameplay-driven cards rarely carry. Strictly a collector’s card — built for display cases and graded slabs.

Rarity Check — What Is a Comic Parallel?

OP-02’s Comic Parallel is an ultra-rare variant featuring manga panel artwork. At approximately 1 in 72 boxes (~0.76% per box), the Ace Comic Parallel is one of the rarest pulls in the entire game — comparable to modern Manga Rares in later sets.

Uta OP02-120 SEC Parallel

#2 — SEC PARALLEL
Uta (OP02-120)
~$253 · JPN: ~¥4,000
The standout Secret Rare of the set, featuring artwork by Demizu Posuka — the illustrator of The Promised Neverland. This collaboration makes Uta’s SEC one of the most artistically distinctive cards in OPTCG. As a character from One Piece Film: Red, Uta bridges movie fans and card collectors.

Edward Newgate OP02-001 Leader Parallel

#3 — L LEADER PARALLEL
Edward Newgate (OP02-001)
~$132 · JPN: ~¥4,000
The most competitively relevant expensive card in OP-02. Newgate’s Leader defined early aggressive strategies and still appears in casual and retro-format play. The parallel version with premium art commands a significant collector premium over the standard Leader.

Cards #4–9: The High-Value Parallels

4

Kuzan OP02-121 SEC Parallel

Kuzan SEC-P
¥3,600 · ~$35
Navy Admiral with ice powers — SEC parallel art commands steady collector demand.

5

Borsalino OP02-114 SR Parallel

Borsalino SR-P
¥3,300 · ~$30
Admiral Kizaru’s light-speed parallel — a fan-favorite from the Marineford battle.

6

Sanji OP02-026 Leader Parallel

Sanji L-P
¥2,800 · ~$31
Red aggro Leader that saw strong tournament play during OP-02’s competitive era.

7

Kuzan OP02-096 SR Parallel

Kuzan SR-P
¥2,600 · ~$27
The second Kuzan in the top 10 — his SR parallel with different artwork holds solid value.

8

Edward Newgate OP02-004 SR Parallel

Newgate SR-P
¥2,500 · ~$26
Whitebeard’s character card in SR parallel — a powerful 10-cost beatstick with collector appeal.

9

Monkey D. Garp OP02-002 Leader Parallel

Garp L-P
¥2,300 · ~$28
The Navy’s Hero as a playable Leader — Garp’s parallel is popular with both players and collectors.

Collector’s Insight

OP-02’s top 10 features multiple Admirals and Whitebeard Pirates — the two factions central to the Marineford War. Character-driven demand means these cards hold value independently of their gameplay relevance.

Should You Buy OP-02 in 2026?

Three years after release, OP-02 occupies a unique position: likely out of print, carrying the most iconic One Piece arc, and priced significantly below EN equivalents for JPN boxes.

For Collectors: A Marineford Must-Have

OP-02 is the Marineford Arc set — and there will never be another first. The emotional resonance of Ace, Whitebeard, and the Admirals gives this set an evergreen appeal that transcends typical booster set life cycles. The Ace Comic Parallel remains one of the most iconic chase cards in the entire game.

With strong indications that early sets (OP-01 through OP-04) are out of print — no restock announcements have been made since March 2024 — sealed boxes are becoming increasingly scarce.

Action: Secure a sealed JPN box while inventory remains available. If budget allows, a sealed case holds strong long-term collector value.

For Competitive Players: Target Singles

While OP-02 introduced several historically important Leaders (Edward Newgate, Sanji, Garp), the competitive meta has evolved considerably. Most OP-02 staples are available as affordable singles on TCGPlayer.

Action: Buy targeted singles for deck staples. Save your box budget for current competitive sets. For meta context, see our OPTCG meta tier list.

For Investors: Scarcity Is Building

OP-02’s likely out-of-print status means supply is fixed while demand from Marineford fans continues. Early OPTCG sets have shown strong appreciation patterns — collectors who held sealed OP-01 and OP-02 boxes have seen steady value growth as the player base expanded globally.

Action: Monitor sealed box prices. If you believe in OPTCG’s long-term growth, early sets at current prices may represent a reasonable entry point.

Buy Now
  • Marineford nostalgia is evergreen
  • Supply decreasing — likely OOP
  • JPN box ~$80 vs EN box ~$490
Wait
  • OP-16 (June 2026) may shift demand
  • Newer sets have richer rarity tiers
  • Singles are more cost-efficient

Quick Decision Guide

Collector? Buy a sealed JPN box. Player? Buy singles from TCGPlayer. Investor? Monitor sealed box prices for your entry point.

Pull Rates & What to Expect from a Box

SEC cards appear in roughly 1 of every 3 boxes, while the Ace Comic Parallel requires approximately 72 boxes to pull on average. The following pull rate data is sourced from Japanese community opening aggregates — not officially confirmed by Bandai but based on thousands of tracked openings.

Rarity Pull Rates

Rarity Rate per Box Rate per Case (12 boxes) Notes
SR ~2.5 per box ~30 per case Guaranteed 2+ per box
SEC ~1 per 3 boxes (33%) ~4 per case 2 SEC types: Uta, Kuzan
SR-P (Alt Art) ~1 per 4–6 boxes ~2–3 per case 26 parallel varieties
L-P (Leader) ~1 per 6 boxes (17%) ~2 per case 8 Leader types
SR-SP (Comic) ~1 per 72 boxes (1.4%) ~1 per 6 cases Ace only — the grail
Important

Pull rates are community-estimated from Japanese opening data. Bandai does not publish official pull rates. Your results will vary.

OP-02 Paramount War pull rate chart showing cards per box by rarity
OP-02 pull rates per box — community-estimated data

Box Opening Patterns (JPN)

Japanese OP-02 boxes follow one of three insertion patterns:

Pattern Contents Approximate Frequency
Pattern A 2 Parallel cards ~25% of boxes
Pattern B 1 Parallel card ~42% of boxes
Pattern C 1 Secret Rare ~33% of boxes

Every box is guaranteed at least 2 Super Rare cards, providing a value floor. Pattern A boxes are the most exciting, as pulling two high-value Parallels can significantly exceed the box price.

What’s in Your Box

The guaranteed SR pulls give every box a solid value floor. Here’s the rarity breakdown and what each tier is worth at current market prices.

Box Contents by Rarity (JPN Box)

Component Expected Cards Card Value Range
SR (guaranteed 2+) 2.5 ¥300–500 each
SR-P (if hit) 0.2 ¥2,500–5,000 each
SEC (if hit) 0.33 ¥3,600–4,000 each
L-P (if hit) 0.17 ¥2,300–4,000 each
SR-SP (lottery) 0.014 ~¥101,000
R + UC bulk ~50 ~¥10–30 each

The guaranteed SRs and bulk cards establish a baseline. A SEC or Parallel hit significantly changes the picture, and the Ace Comic Parallel at ¥101,000 represents the ultimate lottery pull from this set.

Box Value Context

TCG booster boxes are entertainment products where the opening experience is a core part of the value. The guaranteed SR slots ensure every box delivers playable and tradeable cards, while chase pulls like SEC and Comic Parallel add excitement beyond the base contents.

Box vs Singles: When Each Makes Sense

Strategy Best For Pros Cons
Buy a sealed box Collectors who enjoy opening Chase card excitement, potential hits, sealed value Higher cost per specific card
Buy singles Players building decks Exact card guaranteed, often cheaper No surprise factor
Hold sealed Long-term collectors OOP product appreciates Capital locked up, storage needed

The opening experience — peeling packs from a Marineford-themed set, hoping for that Ace Comic Parallel — is something singles purchases can’t replicate.

JPN vs EN — Which Version Should You Buy?

JPN boxes cost roughly one-sixth of EN boxes while offering higher print quality — making them the clear value pick for most international collectors.

JPN Version
  • Box: ~¥10,780 (~$72)
  • Higher print quality (texture, foil)
  • Comic Parallel exclusive
EN Version
  • Box: ~$490+ (sealed)
  • Tournament legal internationally
  • 12 carte per pack (vs JPN 6)

For collectors focused on card quality and parallel art, the JPN version is the stronger choice at a fraction of the cost. EN boxes appeal to collectors who want English-language cards or need cards legal in international tournaments. For a deep dive, see our Japanese vs English One Piece Cards comparison.

Where to Buy OP-02 Paramount War

JPN boxes represent the best combination of price, print quality, and pull variety for international collectors. Our store ships directly from Japan with tracked shipping to the US, Canada, UK, and Australia.

For a detailed walkthrough of importing Japanese OPTCG products, see our guide: How to Buy One Piece Cards from Japan.

  • Shipping: Tracked international shipping typically runs $15–30
  • Customs/duties: US shipments under $800 are generally duty-free
  • Authenticity: All products sourced directly from Japanese distributors
Shop This Set
OP-02 Paramount War Booster Box (JPN)
From ~$72 / ~¥10,780
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

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Buying EN Boxes & Singles

  • TCGPlayer — Largest EN singles marketplace
  • Local game stores — May have singles or sealed product
  • eBay — Check sold listings for sealed EN box pricing

The Bottom Line

OP-02 Paramount War stands as one of the most collectible sets in OPTCG history, combining Marineford’s emotional storytelling with the Ace Comic Parallel’s legendary rarity and the set’s mechanical innovations.

Three Key Takeaways
  1. The Ace Comic Parallel (~$1,195 / ¥101,000) is the set’s crown jewel, with rarity of approximately 1 in 72 boxes sustaining its premium
  2. JPN boxes offer the best value at ~$72 compared to EN boxes at $490+, with higher print quality
  3. OP-02 is likely out of print, making sealed product increasingly scarce — act accordingly for your goals
Portgas D. Ace Comic Parallel

Ace SP
~$1,195
The crown jewel — 1 in 72 boxes

Uta SEC Parallel

Uta SEC
~$253
Demizu Posuka collaboration art

Edward Newgate Leader Parallel

Newgate L
~$132
Whitebeard’s iconic Leader card

Shop This Set
OP-02 Paramount War Booster Box (JPN)
From ~$72 / ~¥10,780
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best cards in OP-02 Paramount War?

The most valuable card is the Portgas D. Ace Comic Parallel (OP02-013), trading at approximately $1,195 (EN) / ¥101,000 (JPN) as of March 2026. Other top chase cards include Uta SEC Parallel (~$253), Edward Newgate Leader Parallel (~$132), and Kuzan SEC Parallel (~$35). The set contains 27 alternate art cards across various rarity tiers.

What are the pull rates for OP-02 Paramount War?

Based on Japanese community opening data, each box guarantees 2+ Super Rares. Secret Rares appear in roughly 1 of every 3 boxes (33%). Leader Parallels show up in about 1 of every 6 boxes (17%). The ultra-rare Comic Parallel (Ace) appears in approximately 1 of every 72 boxes — one of the rarest pulls in the game.

Is OP-02 Paramount War worth buying in 2026?

For collectors, yes — OP-02 captures the Marineford Arc, one of One Piece’s most beloved storylines, and the set is likely out of print. For competitive players, buying individual singles is more cost-effective, as the meta has evolved significantly. JPN boxes at ~$72 offer dramatically better value than EN boxes at ~$490+.

How much is the Ace Comic Parallel worth?

The Portgas D. Ace Comic Parallel (OP02-013) trades at approximately $1,195 in the English market and ¥101,000 (~$670) in the Japanese market as of March 2026. Graded copies (PSA 10) command even higher premiums. The price is sustained by extreme rarity — approximately 1 in 72 boxes.

How many secret rares are in OP-02?

OP-02 contains 2 Secret Rare cards: Uta (OP02-120) and Kuzan (OP02-121). Both have alternate art parallel versions. The Uta SEC Parallel (~$253 / ¥4,000) is the more valuable, partly due to its collaborative artwork by manga artist Demizu Posuka.

What’s the difference between Japanese and English OP-02?

JPN packs contain 6 cards (EN: 12), JPN has higher print quality with textured foiling, and JPN boxes are ~$72 compared to EN boxes at ~$490+. Both share the same 121-card pool plus 27 alternate arts. JPN boxes offer significantly better value for collectors.

What new mechanics did OP-02 introduce?

OP-02 introduced Black color cards (adding a fifth color to the game) and multi-color Leaders (Black/Red, Green/Blue, Purple/Black combinations). These additions permanently expanded strategic options and created new archetype possibilities.


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Related Guides

Da TCG Pocket alle carte fisiche: guida alle carte Pokémon giapponesi

Pokemon TCG Pocket Japanese cards are driving a wave of new collectors into the physical market — and the numbers back it up. The app crossed 150 million downloads, generated $1.25 billion in its first year, and triggered a surge in sealed product prices that is still shaping the market in March 2026.

If you have been swiping through Pocket packs and pulling Immersive three-star cards, you already know the rush. But the app cannot show you the embossed texture of a real Japanese SAR under your fingernails, the weight of a sealed 30-pack booster box, or the fact that your physical pulls hold real market value — from $50 to over $500 per card.

This guide is built specifically for Pokemon TCG Pocket players ready to collect physical Japanese Pokemon cards. You will learn how Pocket’s diamond-star-crown rarity maps to real card rarities, which physical box matches each Pocket expansion, and what makes Japanese cards the collector’s choice. Our team ships over 100 sealed boxes from Tokyo every week — we know both worlds.

Key Takeaway

Your TCG Pocket knowledge translates directly to physical Japanese cards. The rarity system, card art, and set structure are nearly identical — the main difference is that physical JPN cards offer texture, collectibility, and real-world value.

~$55
JPN Box Entry

$50-500+
SAR Card Value

3★ = SAR
Rarity Mapping

30 Packs
Per Box

Why 150 Million Pocket Players Are Discovering Physical Cards

Pokemon TCG Pocket created the biggest wave of new physical card collectors since the 2020 pandemic boom — not by replacing collecting, but by making millions of people care about it.

The Numbers Behind the Surge

In its first year, Pocket players opened 18 billion digital booster packs and collected 111.7 billion cards. That is roughly ten times the physical Pokemon TCG’s best production year (11.9 billion cards from March 2022 to 2023, per The Pokemon Company’s annual report).

According to PokeBeach, card prices on TCGPlayer began rising shortly after Pocket’s October 2024 launch. Sealed product median prices climbed roughly five times from pre-launch levels — a trend that, combined with the upcoming Pokemon 30th anniversary in October 2026, continues to shape the market.

The Pocket-to-Physical Pipeline

The pattern is consistent across collector communities. You start with Pocket’s free daily packs, get hooked on the art, then realize you want something the app cannot deliver: texture, ownership, and real value. Reddit communities like r/PTCGP and r/PokemonTCG are filled with posts from Pocket players sharing their first physical box openings.

Developer DeNA has acknowledged that existing Pocket user retention has declined from launch levels — while new user acquisition stays strong. For many players, the natural next step is physical cards. The app was designed as a gateway, and it is working as intended.

Unboxing a Japanese Pokemon booster box showing 30 sealed packs spread on a table
Physical Japanese Pokemon card box opening with packs spread out
Pokemon TCG Pocket rarity system showing diamond star and crown cards
Pokemon TCG Pocket app screenshot showing rarity system

Pocket Rarity to Physical Rarity — The Translation Guide

Pocket’s diamond-star-crown rarity system maps directly to physical Japanese Pokemon cards — but physical sets include rarities that Pocket has never reproduced. Here is the complete translation.

The Rarity Map

Pocket Rarity Symbol Physical JPN Equivalent Physical Symbol Price Range (Physical)
1 Diamond (Common) C (Common) Near $0
2 Diamond (Uncommon) ◆◆ U (Uncommon) Near $0
3 Diamond (Rare) ◆◆◆ R (Rare) $0.50-$5
4 Diamond (Double Rare) ◆◆◆◆ RR (Double Rare) ★★ $3-$30
1 Star (Illustration Rare) AR (Art Rare) $2-$20
2 Star (Full Art) ★★ SR (Super Rare) ★★★ $10-$100+
3 Star (Immersive) ★★★ No direct equivalent See below
Crown (Ultra Rare) Crown UR (Ultra Rare) $15-$100+
SAR (Special Art Rare) $20-$500+
MUR (Master Ultra Rare) $200-$1,000+

What Pocket Does Not Have

Physical Japanese Pokemon cards include three rarities that do not exist in any form in Pocket:

  • SAR (Special Art Rare) — Full-art trainer cards with cinematic illustrations and embossed textures you can feel under your fingers. SARs are the primary chase cards in physical Japanese sets, with top examples trading at $100-$500+ on SNKRDUNK. Pocket’s two-star full arts are flat digital images by comparison.
  • MUR (Master Ultra Rare) — The rarest card in modern physical Japanese Pokemon. Roughly 1 per 50-60 boxes opened. Valued at $200-$1,000+. Pocket’s Crown rares can be pulled every few hundred packs for free — MURs require real investment and real luck.
  • AR (Art Rare) guaranteed slots — Every physical Japanese box guarantees multiple AR pulls with unique illustrations for each Pokemon in the set. Pocket has Illustration Rares but no guaranteed pulls per pack cycle.

What Physical Cards Do Not Have

Pocket wins on one front: Immersive cards (three-star). These animated, parallax-effect artworks are exclusive to the app — no physical card replicates the movement and depth of an Immersive Charizard ex or Mewtwo ex. Think of physical SARs as the closest real-world counterpart: different technology, same impact, but with a tactile dimension no screen delivers.

Close-up of Japanese Pokemon SAR card showing textured foil and embossing detail compared to Pocket flat digital art
Japanese SAR card showing embossed texture detail

Your Pocket Sets in Physical Form — Which Box to Buy

Every Pocket expansion has matching physical Japanese booster boxes — and the physical versions include SAR and MUR rarities that Pocket cannot show you. Here is the complete map as of March 2026.

B-Series (Pocket) = MEGA Era (Physical JPN)

Pocket’s B-series launched in October 2025 with Mega Rising (B1), introducing Mega Evolution to the app. The physical Japanese TCG launched its MEGA era at the same time. That Mega Blaziken you pulled as a 4-diamond in Pocket? The physical Japanese version has a full-art SAR with embossed metallic texture.

Pocket Expansion Code Physical JPN Box Market Price Chase Card
Mega Rising B1 Mega Brave (M1L) ~$90 (¥13,000) Mega Lucario ex MUR
Mega Rising B1 Mega Symphonia (M1S) ~$93 (¥13,500) Acerola SAR
Crimson Blaze B1a Inferno X (M2) ~$55 (¥8,000) Mega Charizard X ex MUR
Fantastical Parade B2 Munikis Zero (M4) ~$50 (¥7,500) Mega Zygarde ex MUR
Paldean Wonders B2a Ninja Spinner (M3) ~$67 (¥10,000) Mega Greninja ex MUR

Ninja Spinner released on March 13, 2026 — the newest physical box in the MEGA era. If you are opening Paldean Wonders packs in Pocket right now, the physical Ninja Spinner box contains the same MEGA-era card pool with SAR and MUR cards the app cannot reproduce. For the full card breakdown, see our Ninja Spinner Pull Rates & Best Cards guide.

A-Series (Pocket) = Scarlet & Violet Era (Physical JPN)

Pocket’s original A-series pulled from the Scarlet & Violet physical card pool. Some of these physical Japanese boxes are still available:

Pocket Expansion Code Physical JPN Box Market Price Why It Connects
Eevee Grove A3b Terastal Fest ex ~$100 (¥15,000) Eeveelution SARs — all 9 in one set
Celestial Guardians A3 SV era sets $50-$80 Solgaleo & Lunala cards
Genetic Apex A1 Multiple SV sets $50-$100 Original Pocket card pool

If you loved Pocket’s Eevee Grove expansion, the physical Terastal Fest ex High Class Pack contains SAR versions of all nine Eeveelutions — textured, embossed cards that collectors value at $30-$200+ each. The God Pack mechanic (all 10 cards in one pack can be rare) has no Pocket equivalent.

Munikis Zero, Ninja Spinner, and Mega Symphonia Japanese Pokemon booster boxes matching Pocket expansions
Three recommended Japanese Pokemon BOX products side by side

Five Things Physical Cards Have That Pocket Never Will

Physical Japanese cards deliver five experiences that no app update will ever replicate.

1. Texture You Can Feel

A physical Japanese SAR has embossed texture — a raised, fingerprint-like pattern across the entire card surface. MUR cards have a different texture: smoother, metallic, with light-catching properties that shift as you tilt the card. No screen resolution or Immersive animation replicates this.

2. Real Money on the Table

Your Pocket collection is worth exactly $0 on the secondary market. A physical Japanese SAR from Mega Symphonia (Acerola) trades for $80-$200+ on SNKRDUNK. A MUR can command $500-$1,000+. Every pack you open is a real financial event.

Japanese Pokemon Master Ultra Rare MUR card with full gold metallic treatment
MUR card from Japanese Pokemon set showing golden texture

3. PSA Grading Turns Cards into Verified Assets

Pocket cards cannot be graded. Physical cards can be submitted to PSA (Professional Sports Authenticator), which evaluates condition on a 1-10 scale. A PSA 10 (Gem Mint) Japanese SAR worth $80 raw can command $250-$500+ in a graded slab — a 3-6x multiplier. Japanese cards achieve PSA 10 at higher rates than English cards due to superior print quality.

PSA 10 Gem Mint graded Japanese Pokemon SAR card in protective slab case
PSA 10 graded Japanese Pokemon card in slab

4. Permanent Ownership

Pocket cards live inside an app tied to a server. Physical cards survive decades — Base Set Charizards from 1996 sell for thousands in graded condition, nearly 30 years later. With the Pokemon 30th anniversary arriving in October 2026, collector interest in physical cards is at a multi-year high.

5. The 30-Pack Box Opening Experience

Pocket gives you two free packs per day with five cards each. A physical Japanese booster box gives you 30 packs in one sitting — 150 cards, guaranteed multiple rares, and the act of tearing foil wrappers. Collectors who have experienced both consistently describe the real thing as a level above.

Japanese Pokemon booster box 30 packs contents with pulled SAR and AR cards displayed
Japanese Pokemon booster box contents showing 30 packs and pulled cards

Your First Physical Box — Budget Guide for Pocket Players

Munikis Zero at ~$50 (¥7,500) is the lowest entry point in the current MEGA era, while Mega Symphonia at ~$93 offers the best SAR art quality. All prices are secondary market via SNKRDUNK and PriceCharting as of March 2026.

Budget Box Price Best For
Under $60 Munikis Zero (M4) ~$50 (¥7,500) Lowest MEGA era entry, Mega Zygarde MUR chase
Under $60 Inferno X (M2) ~$55 (¥8,000) Mega Charizard X MUR, strong name recognition
$60-100 Ninja Spinner (M3) ~$67 (¥10,000) Brand new (March 2026), Mega Greninja MUR
$60-100 Mega Brave (M1L) ~$90 (¥13,000) Mega Lucario MUR, competitive pull rates
$60-100 Mega Symphonia (M1S) ~$93 (¥13,500) Best SAR art, matches Pocket B1 era
$100+ Terastal Fest ex (HCP) ~$100 (¥15,000) Eeveelution SARs, God Pack mechanic
$100+ MEGA Dream ex (HCP) ~$62 (¥9,200) High Class Pack at a correction price

If you love Pocket’s Mega Rising cards: Start with Munikis Zero ($50) or Inferno X ($55) for the lowest entry, or Mega Symphonia ($93) for the best art.

If you love Pocket’s Eeveelutions: Terastal Fest ex has all nine Eeveelution SARs in one set.

Best value right now: MEGA Dream ex at ~$62 is a High Class Pack at a significant price correction — boosted rare rates at a mid-range price.

For the full set-by-set ranking with five-axis scoring, see our Best Japanese Pokemon Booster Boxes 2026. For High Class Pack breakdowns, check our Best Japanese High Class Packs Guide.

Japanese Pokemon booster boxes organized by price tier from budget to premium
Budget tier comparison of Japanese Pokemon BOX products

Check Current Box Availability →

From App to Mailbox — Buying Japanese Cards Safely

Samurai Sword INC is the safest route for Pocket players making their first physical purchase. Every box ships sealed with shrink wrap intact and a unique serial number — if any box shows signs of search or reseal, we trace it to the source and permanently ban the supplier. Direct shipping from Tokyo with tracking, no middlemen.

The physical card market has a growing counterfeiting problem. SNKRDUNK’s authentication data shows roughly 59% of submitted items require rejection or verification. Before buying from any seller, verify shrink wrap seals and check seller reviews.

For the complete purchasing guide and authentication methods:

Authentic sealed Japanese Pokemon booster box with shrink wrap and Samurai Sword INC serial number
Sealed Japanese Pokemon BOX with shrink wrap and serial number visible

Browse Sealed Japanese Boxes →

The Bottom Line

Pokemon TCG Pocket taught 150 million players to love collecting. Physical Japanese Pokemon cards give you what the app never can: SAR textures you can feel, MUR chase cards worth hundreds of dollars, PSA grading that turns cards into verified assets, and permanent ownership that outlasts any server.

If you are opening Paldean Wonders packs in Pocket right now, the same MEGA-era cards exist in physical Japanese boxes — with embossed foils, exclusive SARs, and real market value starting at $50 per box. The 30th anniversary of Pokemon arrives in October 2026, and collector demand is building.

Three actions to take right now:

  1. Pick a box that matches your Pocket favorites from the set mapping above
  2. Learn to spot fakes with our authentication guide
  3. Start collecting — every serial-numbered box from Samurai Sword INC ships directly from Tokyo with tracked delivery
Start Your Collection
Japanese Pokemon Sealed Booster Boxes
From ~$50 / ~¥7,500
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery · Serial-numbered

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Frequently Asked Questions [schema: FAQPage]

How does Pokemon TCG Pocket’s rarity system compare to physical Japanese cards?

Pocket uses diamonds (1-4), stars (1-3), and crowns. Physical Japanese cards use C, U, R, RR, SR, SAR, MUR, AR, and UR. The systems roughly align — 4-diamond equals RR, 2-star equals SR — but physical cards include SAR (Special Art Rare) and MUR (Master Ultra Rare) rarities that have no Pocket equivalent. SARs trade at $20-$500+ and MURs at $200-$1,000+.

Which physical box should I buy if I like Pocket’s Mega Rising expansion?

Munikis Zero (~$50) or Inferno X (~$55) offer the lowest entry into the MEGA era. Mega Symphonia (~$93) or Mega Brave (~$90) deliver the best SAR art and MUR chase cards from the same card pool as Pocket’s B1 set. All include embossed textures and rarities that do not exist in the app.

Can I get Pocket’s Immersive cards as physical cards?

No. Immersive (three-star) cards are digital-only with animated parallax effects exclusive to the app. The closest physical equivalent is a Japanese SAR — embossed textures and metallic inks you can feel and see shift in the light. Different technology, comparable impact.

Are the cards in Pokemon TCG Pocket the same as physical Japanese Pokemon cards?

They share the same Pokemon and trainers, but they are different products. About 40% of Pocket cards feature original artwork not found in any physical set. Physical Japanese cards include exclusive rarities (SAR, MUR) with embossed textures, and the pull rates differ significantly. Pocket uses a simplified rarity system while physical cards have their own notation.

Is it worth spending money on physical cards when Pocket is free?

Pocket is excellent for exploring sets at no cost. But Pocket cards hold zero resale value. Physical Japanese Pokemon cards are tangible assets: SARs sell for $50-$500+, PSA grading can multiply value 3-6x, and you own them permanently. With the Pokemon 30th anniversary in October 2026 driving collector interest higher, many Pocket players see physical cards as the natural next step.

Where is the best place to buy Japanese Pokemon cards as a Pocket player?

Specialized Japanese card exporters like Samurai Sword INC offer authenticated, serial-numbered sealed boxes shipped directly from Tokyo with tracked delivery. This eliminates tampered or counterfeit product risk. For all purchasing options, see our complete buying guide.

What is the cheapest way to start collecting physical Japanese Pokemon cards?

Munikis Zero at ~$50 (¥7,500) is the current lowest-priced MEGA era box, giving you 30 packs with SAR and MUR chase potential. MEGA Dream ex at ~$62 (¥9,200) is a High Class Pack at a correction price — boosted rare rates at mid-range cost. Both cost less than what many Pocket players spend on in-app purchases monthly.



⚡ Shop Japanese Pokemon Booster Boxes

Authentic sealed products shipped directly from Tokyo, Japan with tracking & insurance via FedEx.

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Tassi di Uscita e Migliori Carte Terastal Festival ex [SV8a]

Umbreon ex SAR from Terastal Festival ex has climbed to ¥55,000 ($310) on the Japanese secondary market — a 17% increase since its December 2024 launch.

Every box guarantees one Special Art Rare. Nine Eeveelution SARs, God Packs containing up to all nine in a single pack, and 101 Master Ball mirror variants make SV8a the most collector-focused High Class Pack in the Scarlet & Violet era. Fifteen months after release, pull rates and card values have matured — Umbreon keeps climbing while the box price has stabilized at ¥15,000.

We track Japanese Pokemon card prices daily from our Tokyo warehouse, shipping hundreds of sealed JPN boxes every week. This guide covers the exact pull rates, ranks the top 10 most valuable cards with March 2026 prices, breaks down the box expected value across all 33 SARs, and explains God Packs and Master Ball mirrors in full detail.

What you will find: pull rates per box, top 10 cards with JPN and USD prices, a full box EV calculation, God Pack odds, Master Ball mirror breakdown, and buy recommendations for collectors, investors, and players.

Key Takeaway

Terastal Festival ex (SV8a) is the ultimate Eeveelution set with all 9 Eeveelution SARs. Umbreon ex SAR leads at ¥55,000, and the set offers one of the highest EVs in the Scarlet & Violet era.

¥15,000
Box Price (JPN)

¥55,000
Umbreon SAR

33 SARs
SAR Pool

+17%
Since Launch

Terastal Festival ex — Set Overview

Terastal Festival ex is the best-performing 2024 High Class Pack by secondary market value — built around the Eeveelution family, Terastal mechanics, and a guaranteed SAR structure that no standard expansion can match.

Release Date, Price & Pack Contents

Spec Detail
Set Code SV8a
Set Name Terastal Festival ex
Type High Class Pack
Release Date December 6, 2024 (JPN)
ENG Equivalent Prismatic Evolutions
MSRP ¥550/pack (¥5,500/box)
Market Price ¥15,000 (~$102 at ¥147/USD)
Packs per Box 10
Cards per Pack 10
Total Cards 232 (188 main set + 44 secret rares)
SAR Count 33
UR Count 5
SR Count 12

Each pack contains 10 cards with one Pokemon ex (RR) guaranteed per pack. Every box guarantees at least one SAR — a structure unique to High Class Packs.

Set Theme & Key Features

Three elements define this set:

All 9 Eeveelutions as ex with SARs. Vaporeon, Jolteon, Flareon, Espeon, Umbreon, Leafeon, Glaceon, Sylveon, and Eevee — each receives an ex card and a Special Art Rare illustration. This is the first time all nine have appeared together in a single set with premium art treatments.

Master Ball Mirror cards. A special reverse holo pattern featuring a Master Ball watermark. 101 Pokemon receive this treatment, with pull rates of approximately one per two boxes. Umbreon’s Master Ball Mirror alone trades at ¥22,000.

God Packs. Extremely rare packs containing multiple SARs. Two types exist — one with three random Eeveelution SARs and another with all nine Eeveelution SARs in a single pack.

JPN vs Prismatic Evolutions

Prismatic Evolutions (the English equivalent) remains supply-constrained well into 2026. JPN SV8a offers several advantages: higher print quality with textured holofoil, exclusive God Packs not found in ENG booster boxes, a guaranteed SAR per box, and JPN cards that historically trade at a 15-40% premium over ENG equivalents. For a detailed breakdown, see our Japanese vs English Pokemon cards comparison.

Top 10 Most Valuable Cards

Umbreon ex SAR dominates at ¥55,000 ($310) — nearly three times the next card. Eeveelution SARs claim 8 of the top 10 spots, with a surprise entry from Umbreon’s Master Ball Mirror at #3.

Rank Card Rarity Card # JPN Price (¥) USD
1 Umbreon ex SAR 217/187 ¥55,000 $310
2 Sylveon ex SAR 212/187 ¥19,000 $110
3 Umbreon MBM 092/187 ¥22,000 $49
4 Espeon ex SAR 211/187 ¥8,500 $51
5 Flareon ex SAR 202/187 ¥8,300 $45
6 Leafeon ex SAR 200/187 ¥8,000 $57
7 Glaceon ex SAR 206/187 ¥8,000 $50
8 Vaporeon ex SAR 205/187 ¥7,800 $54
9 Jolteon ex SAR 209/187 ¥7,000 $39
10 Eevee ex SAR 223/187 ¥5,700 $31

Prices as of March 2026. JPN prices from SNKRDUNK and pokeka-atari.jp. USD from PriceCharting.

#1 Umbreon ex SAR (217/187) — ¥55,000 / $310

Umbreon ex SAR 217/187 Terastal Festival ex Pokemon card
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-b8c579cc65bd/sar_example_umbreon-master.webp

Umbreon ex SAR is the undisputed chase card, now trading at ¥55,000 on the Japanese secondary market — up from ¥47,000 at launch. The illustration features Umbreon in a moonlit forest scene, widely considered one of the most striking SARs in the Scarlet & Violet era.

Umbreon has topped every Eeveelution set it appears in. The Eevee Heroes Umbreon VMAX SA from 2021 followed the same trajectory, peaking above ¥100,000. A dark aesthetic, fierce fan following, and limited supply across 33 SARs in the pool create a price floor that has only moved upward since launch. PSA 10 copies have sold for over $500 on eBay.

For collectors, this is the marquee pull. For investors, Umbreon SARs hold value better than any other Eeveelution across every set in the modern era.

#2 Sylveon ex SAR (212/187) — ¥19,000 / $110

Sylveon ex SAR 212/187 Terastal Festival ex Pokemon card
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-38ec558f6e0f/sylveon_sar_51fc56f1-c27e-4f77-b20e-f9cec2b193eb-master.webp

Sylveon ex SAR holds steady at ¥19,000, making it the clear second-tier chase card. Sylveon consistently ranks as the second-most popular Eeveelution behind Umbreon, with strong demand across Western and Asian markets.

The pastel dreamscape illustration contrasts beautifully with Umbreon’s dark tones. At roughly one-third of Umbreon’s price, Sylveon offers an accessible entry point for collectors who want a high-end SAR from this set.

#3 Umbreon Master Ball Mirror (092/187) — ¥22,000 / $49

The most surprising entry on this list. Umbreon’s Master Ball Mirror is a regular Umbreon card with a Master Ball watermark reverse holo pattern — not a secret rare. Yet it trades at ¥22,000, up from ¥18,000 three months ago.

The math explains the price: Master Ball Mirrors appear in approximately 1 out of every 2 boxes, and there are 101 possible cards in the pool. Pulling a specific card — Umbreon — requires roughly 1 in 202 boxes. That makes this card functionally rarer than most SARs in practical terms.

#4-10 Quick Rankings

#4 Espeon ex SAR (211/187) — ¥8,500 / $51. Espeon’s psychic-themed illustration commands strong appeal in Japan. Consistent mid-tier pricing among the Eeveelution SARs.

Espeon ex SAR 211/187 Terastal Festival ex Pokemon card
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-3807e80ec4f9/umbreon_mbm_44a0a9d6-10cc-4f9c-bd0e-712969e1c4a6-master.webp

#5 Flareon ex SAR (202/187) — ¥8,300 / $45. Fire-type Eeveelution with a warm, dynamic illustration. Slightly below Espeon in character popularity rankings in Japan.

#6 Leafeon ex SAR (200/187) — ¥8,000 / $57. Leafeon commands a higher USD price than its JPN yen value suggests — indicating stronger Western demand for this nature-themed art.

#7 Glaceon ex SAR (206/187) — ¥8,000 / $50. Ice-type Eeveelution with crystal-themed artwork. Tied with Leafeon in JPN pricing, stable at ¥8,000 since January 2026.

#8 Vaporeon ex SAR (205/187) — ¥7,800 / $54. Water-type Eeveelution with aquatic-themed art. Trades slightly below the mid-pack Eeveelutions in JPN but competitive in USD.

#9 Jolteon ex SAR (209/187) — ¥7,000 / $39. Electric-type Eeveelution closing out the rankings. ¥7,000 represents the floor price for Eeveelution SARs in this set.

#10 Eevee ex SAR (223/187) — ¥5,700 / $31. Eevee itself rounds out the top 10 with its Terastal illustration. A second Eevee ex SAR (the Natsuko Shoji patissier collaboration, #224) trades at ¥5,500 — illustrated by pastry chef Natsuko Shoji, the first confectioner to collaborate with Pokemon on card art.

Notable mentions outside top 10: Pikachu ex UR #236 (¥5,500 / $41 — down from ¥8,000 at launch), Eevee ex SAR Patissier #224 (¥5,500), Roaring Moon ex SAR #218 (¥4,300), Illumanise ex SAR #207 (¥2,400).

Pull Rates & What’s in Your Box

Every box guarantees one SAR — that SAR alone provides a baseline value, and everything else adds on top.

Pull Rates Per Box

Rarity Per Box Per Pack Total Pool Notes
RR (Double Rare) ~9 90% 28 1 per pack (except SAR pack)
ACE SPEC 1 10% 4 Guaranteed 1 per box
Pokeball Mirror ~3 30% 144 Reverse holo with Pokeball watermark
SAR (Special Art Rare) 1 ~10% 33 Guaranteed 1 per box
Master Ball Mirror ~0.5 ~5% 101 ~1 per 2 boxes
SR (Super Rare) ~0.2 ~2% 12 ~1 per 5 boxes
UR (Ultra Rare) ~0.07 ~0.7% 5 ~1 per 15 boxes
God Pack Extremely rare <0.1% 2 types Multiple SARs per pack

Pull rate estimates based on Japanese community opening data. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Terastal Festival ex pull rates chart showing SAR SR UR rates per box
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-f9d75593ce10/price_trends_chart_f9e6f6ac-ac83-461b-b789-806a93fce1c9-master.webp

Box EV Breakdown

The key context first: most sealed Pokemon TCG boxes have a negative expected value — you pay a premium for the opening experience, the chance at a chase card, and guaranteed rarity slots. SV8a follows this pattern, but the guaranteed SAR provides a stronger floor than most sets.

Here is the average expected value per box, calculated across all 33 SARs using March 2026 secondary market prices:

Component Pull Rate Avg Value (¥) EV Contribution (¥)
SAR (guaranteed) 1.0 ¥5,033 ¥5,033
RR × 9 9.0 ¥300 ¥2,700
ACE SPEC 1.0 ¥500 ¥500
Pokeball Mirror × 3 3.0 ¥100 ¥300
Master Ball Mirror 0.5 ¥1,500 ¥750
SR chance 0.2 ¥2,000 ¥400
UR chance 0.07 ¥5,500 ¥385
Common/Uncommon fills ¥100
Total Box EV ¥10,168

Box price: ¥15,000 (~$102) | EV: ¥10,168 (~$69) | EV ratio: 68%

The average SAR value of ¥5,033 is calculated across all 33 SARs in the pool — from Umbreon ex SAR at ¥55,000 down to Ogapon ex SARs at ~¥650. The nine Eeveelution SARs average ¥14,167, but they represent only 9 of 33 possible pulls. The median SAR value is ¥2,244 (Soublaze ex SAR).

This is standard for Pokemon TCG sealed product. The value proposition is not about guaranteed returns — it is about the SAR floor that supports every box, the upside variance from Umbreon and Sylveon, and the God Pack jackpot potential. Collectors who enjoy the opening experience and keep what they pull are the primary audience.

Singles vs Box — Which Is Better?

Factor Buy Singles Buy Box
Target a specific card Best option — pay market price once Low odds (1 in 33 for a specific SAR)
Eeveelution SAR set completion ~¥130,000 for all 9 SARs Need ~4 boxes to likely pull one Eeveelution SAR
Master Ball Mirror chase Expensive singles but guaranteed ~1/202 boxes for specific MBM
Opening experience None Every box guarantees at least one SAR
Budget control Exact cost known ¥15,000 per box, variable returns

If you want a specific Eeveelution SAR, buy the single. If you want the experience of a guaranteed SAR pull with Umbreon or God Pack upside, boxes are the play. For a full comparison of buying options, see our best Japanese Pokemon booster box guide.

God Packs & Master Ball Mirrors

God Packs and Master Ball Mirrors are the two chase mechanics that set SV8a apart from standard expansions — and most English-language guides barely mention them.

God Pack Type 1 — Triple SAR

The first God Pack variant contains 7 reverse holo cards plus 3 random Eeveelution SARs in a single pack. Three SARs from a ¥15,000 box — the combined value can exceed ¥70,000 if Umbreon or Sylveon are among the three.

God Pack Type 2 — Complete Eeveelution SAR Set

The second variant is the ultimate pull: all 9 Eeveelution SARs in a single pack. Combined value exceeds ¥130,000 (~$885 at current prices). This is one of the most valuable single pack openings possible in the modern Pokemon TCG.

God Pack rates are not officially disclosed, but Japanese community data estimates them at roughly 1 in 300-500 boxes.

Master Ball Mirror — The Hidden Chase

Umbreon Master Ball Mirror reverse holo card Terastal Festival ex
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-e4e078ca0e22/espeon_ex_sar_5db5ec5f-c034-4cb2-9cfe-534abce63251-master.webp

Master Ball Mirrors are reverse holo cards featuring a Master Ball watermark instead of the standard Pokeball. There are 101 cards in the MBM pool — all Pokemon cards without rarity markings.

Key MBM prices (March 2026):

Card MBM # Price (¥) USD
Umbreon 092/187 ¥22,000 $49
Espeon 062/187 ¥4,500 $38
Sylveon 068/187 ¥4,500 $20
Glaceon ¥2,500
Vaporeon ¥2,500
Jolteon ¥2,500
Leafeon ¥2,500
Eevee 125/187 ¥2,000 $25
Flareon ¥2,000
Most others ¥500-1,500 $5-15

With approximately 1 MBM per 2 boxes and 101 possible cards, the chance of pulling a specific Master Ball Mirror card is roughly 1 in 202 boxes. Umbreon MBM at ¥22,000 has risen 22% since launch — making it one of the best-performing non-SAR cards in the set.

Should You Buy This Box?

SV8a is the strongest High Class Pack since VSTAR Universe for collectors. The guaranteed SAR, Eeveelution theme, God Packs, and stable market pricing at ¥15,000 make it a standout product — if you are buying for the right reasons.

For Collectors

This is the definitive Eeveelution set. Nine SARs with unique artwork, Master Ball Mirror variants for every Eeveelution, and God Packs that can deliver the complete SAR collection in a single pack. No other set in the Scarlet & Violet era concentrates this much Eeveelution content.

The guaranteed SAR per box means every opening delivers at least one premium card. Our recommendation: buy 1-2 boxes for the opening experience, then target specific missing SARs as singles.

For Investors

High Class Packs have the strongest track record for long-term appreciation among Japanese Pokemon TCG products. VSTAR Universe (released December 2022) now trades at 2-3x its initial market price. Shiny Treasure ex followed a similar trajectory.

This set has additional tailwinds: Eeveelution demand is evergreen, Prismatic Evolutions supply constraints continue driving JPN demand, and the set is a limited-print High Class Pack. The Umbreon ex SAR’s 17% appreciation (¥47,000 → ¥55,000) since launch signals strong collector demand.

Monitor the price trajectory. The ¥15,000 box price has held steady since early 2026, and historical patterns from previous HCPs suggest gradual appreciation once supply tightens further. For detailed HCP investment data, see our High Class Pack comparison guide.

For Players

The Eeveelution ex cards are playable in Standard format. Umbreon ex, Espeon ex, and Jolteon ex see competitive play in specific meta decks. A single box provides ~9 RR Pokemon ex cards plus an ACE SPEC — solid deck-building material.

JPN vs ENG — Why Choose Japanese?

Four reasons to go JPN over Prismatic Evolutions:

  1. Available now. Prismatic Evolutions remains supply-constrained in Western markets through 2026
  2. Print quality. JPN cards feature textured holofoil and higher color saturation
  3. Price premium. JPN SARs historically trade 15-40% above their ENG equivalents
  4. God Packs. A JPN-exclusive feature not present in Prismatic Evolutions booster boxes

For a comprehensive comparison, read our Japanese vs English Pokemon cards guide.

Where to Buy Terastal Festival ex

For sealed, shrink-wrapped boxes shipped directly from Japan:

Samurai Sword INC offers authenticated JPN boxes with serial-tracked inventory. Every box ships with a unique serial number — if a box shows signs of search or reseal, we trace it back to the source and ban that supplier. Our inspection process handles hundreds of boxes weekly from our Tokyo warehouse.

Terastal Festival ex booster box product listing Samurai Sword INC
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-664b5926d2a1/pikachu_ex_ur-master.webp

Other options include SNKRDUNK for JPN domestic pricing, eBay for international sellers (verify seller ratings carefully), and proxy services like Buyee for Japanese marketplace purchases. For a complete comparison of buying options, see our guide to buying Japanese Pokemon cards from Japan.

The Bottom Line

This set has earned its place as one of the best High Class Packs in the Scarlet & Violet era. Three key takeaways:

  1. Guaranteed SAR floor. Every box includes at least one of 33 SARs. The nine Eeveelution SARs average ¥14,167, and even lower-tier SARs hold value above ¥600. No box is truly empty.
  1. Umbreon drives the ceiling. The ¥55,000 Umbreon ex SAR is still climbing — up 17% since launch. One in 33 boxes statistically contains this card, making it a genuine jackpot pull.
  1. HCP appreciation pattern. Historical data from VSTAR Universe and Shiny Treasure ex shows sealed HCP boxes at the post-launch floor tend to appreciate over 12-24 months. SV8a has entered this window.
Top 3 cards from Terastal Festival ex Umbreon SAR Sylveon SAR Umbreon MBM
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-5af53ddaafc4/chart_ev_breakdown_fdf0beef-1af6-4671-8f98-9cd024d60b2d-master.webp

For Eeveelution fans and collectors — this is the set. For investors watching HCP cycles — ¥15,000 represents the stable floor with Umbreon already appreciating. For anyone who missed Prismatic Evolutions — the JPN original offers better pull rates, God Packs, and superior print quality.

View complete Terastal Festival Ex card list →

Frequently Asked Questions [schema: FAQPage]

What are the pull rates for Terastal Festival ex?

Each box guarantees 1 SAR (Special Art Rare), 1 ACE SPEC, approximately 9 RRs, and 3 Pokeball Mirrors. Master Ball Mirrors appear in roughly 1 out of every 2 boxes. SRs appear at about 1 per 5 boxes, and URs at approximately 1 per 15 boxes. There are 33 different SARs in the pool, 12 SRs, and 5 URs. These rates are community-estimated based on Japanese opening data, not officially confirmed.

What is the most expensive card in Terastal Festival ex?

Umbreon ex SAR (217/187) is the most valuable card, trading at ¥55,000 ($310) as of March 2026 — up 17% from its launch price of ¥47,000. PSA 10 graded copies have sold for over $500. The second most valuable is Umbreon Master Ball Mirror at ¥22,000 ($49), followed by Sylveon ex SAR at ¥19,000 ($110).

Is Terastal Festival ex worth buying?

At ¥15,000 (~$102) per box, the average expected value is approximately ¥10,168 (68% EV ratio) — which is standard for Pokemon TCG sealed product. The value comes from the guaranteed SAR per box (average ¥5,033, but Eeveelution SARs average ¥14,167), the chance at Umbreon ex SAR (¥55,000), God Pack potential, and the collecting experience. For Eeveelution collectors, this set has no substitute.

How many SARs are in a Terastal Festival ex box?

Each box guarantees exactly 1 SAR from a pool of 33 different SARs. Nine are Eeveelution ex SARs, with additional SARs for Pokemon like Roaring Moon ex, Dragapult ex, and supporter characters. In rare cases, God Packs can contain 3 or even all 9 Eeveelution SARs in a single pack.

What are God Packs in Terastal Festival ex?

God Packs are extremely rare packs containing multiple premium cards. Type 1 includes 7 reverse holos plus 3 random Eeveelution SARs. Type 2 contains all 9 Eeveelution SARs (combined value exceeding ¥130,000 / ~$885). God Pack rates are estimated at roughly 1 in 300-500 boxes based on community data.

How does Terastal Festival ex compare to Prismatic Evolutions?

SV8a is the Japanese original; Prismatic Evolutions is the English adaptation. Key differences: JPN version has God Packs (not in ENG booster boxes), higher print quality with textured holofoil, a guaranteed SAR per box, and JPN cards historically trade at a 15-40% premium. Prismatic Evolutions has different set composition, different pack structure, and has been supply-constrained since launch.

Will Terastal Festival ex increase in value?

Umbreon ex SAR has already increased 17% since launch (¥47,000 → ¥55,000), and Umbreon MBM rose 22% (¥18,000 → ¥22,000). The sealed box price has stabilized at ¥15,000. Historical data from VSTAR Universe and Shiny Treasure ex shows HCP boxes typically appreciate once past the stabilization phase. Past performance does not guarantee future results, but Eeveelution demand and limited production support long-term collector interest.



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Related Guides

Tassi di Uscita e Migliori Carte Ruler of the Black Flame

Ruler of the Black Flame pull rates make this set a high-stakes gamble with massive upside. The Charizard ex SAR just climbed to ¥47,800 (~$325) — up 6.7% in a single week as the Pokemon 30th anniversary drives collector demand higher. That is more than three times the cost of the box.

Two and a half years after release, SV3 remains the only set where one pull can return 3x your box investment. The best cards from Ruler of the Black Flame are overwhelmingly Charizard-centric, with the SAR accounting for over 85% of the set’s high-end value.

This guide covers live JPN market prices from Altema/Card Rush and SNKRDUNK as of March 2026, complete pull rate breakdowns, a full box EV calculation against the current ¥15,500 market price, PSA 10 investment data, and a clear buying strategy for collectors, investors, and players. Our team handles 500+ Japanese Pokemon card boxes monthly from our Tokyo warehouse, and SV3 remains one of our most-requested sets.

Key Takeaway

Ruler of the Black Flame (SV3) features the most valuable modern Charizard — Charizard ex SAR at ¥47,800, worth over 3× the box price. This set remains one of the strongest pulls-per-box in the Scarlet & Violet era.

¥15,500
Box Price (JPN)

¥47,800
Charizard SAR

~3x
Top Pull ROI

30+ Months
Post-Release

Ruler of the Black Flame — Set Overview

SV3 introduced the Dark Tera-type mechanic to the Pokemon TCG, headlined by a Charizard ex that swaps Fire for Dark typing — a first in the franchise’s 30-year history.

Release Info & Pack Contents

Spec Detail
Set Code SV3
JPN Release July 28, 2023
ENG Equivalent Obsidian Flames (August 11, 2023)
MSRP ¥5,400 (¥180/pack)
Market Price ¥15,500 (~$105)
Cards 108 + 33 secret rares (141 total)
Packs/Box 30 (5 cards each)
Ruler of the Black Flame SV3 Japanese booster box sealed
SV3 Ruler of the Black Flame booster box

Based on our daily handling of SV3 inventory, box prices have risen from ¥14,000 to ¥15,500 since early 2026. Multiple reprints kept prices accessible through 2025, but reprint frequency has slowed considerably — and the 30th anniversary is creating fresh demand.

Set Theme — Dark Tera-Type Charizard

The headline feature is Charizard ex with Dark Terastallization. This 330HP Stage 2 Pokemon uses Fire Energy but carries Dark typing, creating unique deck-building opportunities that kept it competitively relevant for over a year after release.

Beyond Charizard, the set includes Pidgeot ex (a staple consistency card that defined the 2023-2024 meta), Tyranitar ex with Lightning Tera-type, and six SAR cards featuring some of the SV era’s most striking illustrations.

JPN vs International Timeline

The Japanese Ruler of the Black Flame launched two weeks before Obsidian Flames. The card pool is largely identical, but the price gap tells the real story: the Japanese Charizard ex SAR trades at 10-20x the price of its English equivalent. This premium reflects superior print quality, texture work, and concentrated collector demand for the JPN version.

Top 10 Most Valuable Cards (March 2026)

The Charizard ex SAR at ¥47,800 dominates this set’s value chart, accounting for over 85% of the total high-end value. The remaining nine cards combined barely match the price of one Charizard SAR.

Rank Card Rarity JPN Price (¥) USD Est.
1 Charizard ex (134/108) SAR ¥47,800 ~$325
2 Charizard ex (139/108) UR ¥7,280 ~$50
3 Pidgeot ex (136/108) SAR ¥3,580 ~$24
4 Charizard ex (125/108) SR ¥3,280 ~$22
5 Fire Energy (141/108) UR ¥2,180 ~$15
6 Ninetales (AR) AR ¥1,880 ~$13
7 Cleffa (AR) AR ¥1,380 ~$9
8 Eiscue ex (133/108) SAR ¥1,180 ~$8
9 Omodaka (137/108) SAR ¥1,180 ~$8
10 Poppy (138/108) SAR ¥980 ~$7

Prices as of March 2026. Source: Altema/Card Rush secondary market data.

#1 Charizard ex SAR (134/108) — ¥47,800 (~$325)

Charizard ex SAR 134/108 Ruler of the Black Flame special art rare card
Charizard ex SAR 134/108 from Ruler of the Black Flame

The Dark Tera-type Charizard ex SAR features a full-art illustration of Charizard emerging from crystallized darkness — one of the most visually striking cards in the entire SV era. At ¥47,800, it has climbed 6.7% in just one week, reflecting the 30th anniversary momentum. Three factors support this price: Charizard’s universal appeal, the card’s competitive history during the 2023-2024 season, and SAR pull rates of roughly 1-in-24 boxes for this specific card.

PSA 10 graded copies have surged to ¥69,300 (~$470) — a 33% jump from ¥52,000 last month. According to PriceCharting, ungraded copies sell at approximately $145, while PSA 10 commands $415. For a deeper look at which cards are worth grading, see our PSA grading investment guide.

The English Obsidian Flames Charizard ex SIR trades at roughly $15-20 on TCGPlayer — making the Japanese version 15-20x more valuable. That gap reflects the quality difference collectors pay for.

#2 Charizard ex UR (139/108) — ¥7,280 (~$50)

Charizard ex UR 139/108 Ruler of the Black Flame ultra rare gold card
Charizard ex UR 139/108 from Ruler of the Black Flame

The gold Ultra Rare (UR) Charizard ex offers a premium alternative without the five-figure price tag. At ¥7,280, it sits in a sweet spot: expensive enough to feel special, accessible enough for most collectors. UR pull rates are approximately 1-in-20 boxes, making this significantly easier to pull than the SAR. The gold foil treatment on Dark Tera-type Charizard is visually distinct from any other Charizard in the SV series.

#3 Pidgeot ex SAR (136/108) — ¥3,580 (~$24)

Pidgeot ex SAR 136/108 Ruler of the Black Flame special art rare
Pidgeot ex SAR 136/108 from Ruler of the Black Flame

Pidgeot ex defined competitive play during 2023-2024 with its Quick Search ability. The SAR illustration shows Pidgeot soaring through clouds — a clean, dynamic design that appeals to collectors beyond the competitive scene. At ¥3,580, this card is an underrated pickup considering Pidgeot ex’s lasting impact on the game’s history.

Cards #4–#10

#4 Charizard ex SR (125/108) — ¥3,280 (~$22): The standard full-art SR treatment. Player demand for Charizard ex decks keeps this above ¥3,000.

#5 Fire Energy UR (141/108) — ¥2,180 (~$15): Gold secret rare Energy cards hold steady collector value. Fire Energy sees use across multiple deck types, combining play utility with collectibility.

#6 Ninetales AR — ¥1,880 (~$13): The highest-value Art Rare (AR) in SV3. Ninetales’ elegant illustration consistently resonates with collectors.

Ninetales art rare card from Ruler of the Black Flame SV3
Ninetales AR from Ruler of the Black Flame

#7 Cleffa AR — ¥1,380 (~$9): Cleffa’s cute aesthetic drives demand among character collectors. Art Rares are guaranteed at 3 per box, but pulling this specific card still requires luck.

#8 Eiscue ex SAR (133/108) — ¥1,180 (~$8): A niche SAR with a playful illustration. Lower demand keeps the price modest — an affordable entry into SV3’s SAR pool.

Eiscue ex SAR 133/108 Ruler of the Black Flame special art rare
Eiscue ex SAR 133/108 from Ruler of the Black Flame

#9 Omodaka SAR (137/108) — ¥1,180 (~$8): Trainer SAR featuring the Paldea Elite Four member. Full-art trainer illustrations give this card a distinct collector appeal.

#10 Poppy SAR (138/108) — ¥980 (~$7): At under ¥1,000, Poppy represents the floor price for SV3’s SAR cards.

For a broader view of where these cards rank in the current market, see our most valuable Japanese Pokemon cards ranking.

Should You Buy This Box in 2026?

For Charizard collectors, Ruler of the Black Flame offers one of the best risk-reward profiles of any SV-era set — a ¥15,500 box with a realistic shot at a ¥47,800 card. Prices are climbing, not falling.

For Collectors

If Charizard is your chase Pokemon, this box is a must-open. No other SV expansion concentrates this much value in a single card. The Dark Tera-type SAR illustration ranks among the top 5 most striking Charizard artworks ever printed, and the concept has historical significance as a franchise first.

Beyond the Charizard SAR, every box guarantees 3 Art Rares (Ninetales at ¥1,880 and Cleffa at ¥1,380 are the highlights), and the Pidgeot ex SAR at ¥3,580 provides a strong consolation pull.

If you prefer guaranteed results, consider buying the Charizard ex SAR as a single at ¥47,800 — roughly 3 boxes worth, but eliminates the pull-rate gamble entirely.

For Investors

The 30th anniversary of Pokemon in 2026 is already moving prices. The Charizard ex SAR climbed from ¥44,800 to ¥47,800 in one week. PSA 10 copies surged from ¥52,000 to ¥69,300 — a 33% jump that signals strong institutional and collector demand.

Historically, anniversary milestones (20th in 2016, 25th in 2021) triggered 40-80% appreciation in key Charizard cards within a 6-month window. The SV3 Charizard ex SAR, as the definitive modern Dark-type Charizard, is well-positioned. If the pattern holds, ¥60,000-70,000 for raw copies by Q4 2026 is plausible.

Sealed box investment at ¥15,500 is conservative but lower-risk. Monitor reprint announcements: once reprints are confirmed ended, sealed prices typically accelerate within 6-12 months. For more on card investment strategies, see our 2026 investment guide.

For Players

Charizard ex and Pidgeot ex both rotated out of Standard format. For Expanded or casual decks, singles are the efficient path — Charizard ex RR trades at just ¥200-300, and Pidgeot ex RR is under ¥200.

JPN vs ENG — Which Version?

Factor JPN (SV3) ENG (Obsidian Flames)
Box Price ¥15,500 (~$105) ~$50-60
Charizard ex SAR/SIR ¥47,800 (~$325) ~$15-20
Price Premium 15-20x for top cards Baseline
Print Quality Higher texture, foil quality Standard
Long-term Value Rising (+6.7% this week) Stable
Availability Limited (import required) Widely available

The price gap speaks for itself. For long-term value and print quality, the JPN version justifies its premium — especially with 30th anniversary momentum pushing prices upward.

For our complete breakdown of JPN vs ENG differences, see Japanese vs English Pokemon Cards.

Check SV3 box availability →

Pull Rates & What’s in Your Box

Every SV3 box guarantees at least one SR-or-better card, three Art Rares, and four Double Rares. The Charizard ex SAR is the variance card that can transform a ¥3,000 return into a ¥50,000 jackpot.

Context first: negative expected value is standard for Pokemon card boxes, just as a concert ticket does not return its face value in tangible goods. The guaranteed Art Rares, the opening experience, and the chance at a chase card are the product. The EV calculation simply helps you understand the financial dimension.

Pull Rate Table

Rarity Cards in Set Pull Rate per Box Odds per Specific Card
SAR 6 ~25% (1 in 4 boxes) ~4.2% (1 in 24 boxes)
UR 3 ~5% (1 in 20 boxes) ~1.7% (1 in 60 boxes)
SR 12 ~70% (most boxes) ~5.8% per card
AR 12 3 per box (guaranteed) ~25% per card
RR ~20 4 per box (guaranteed) ~20% per card

Pull rates estimated based on community opening data. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Ruler of the Black Flame SV3 pull rates chart showing SAR UR SR AR RR distribution
Pull rate distribution chart for Ruler of the Black Flame

Box Contents Breakdown

Component Probability Avg Value EV Contribution
SAR pull 25% ¥9,283 ¥2,321
UR pull 5% ¥3,553 ¥178
SR pull 70% ¥720 ¥504
3x AR (guaranteed) 100% ¥545 each ¥1,635
4x RR (guaranteed) 100% ¥250 each ¥1,000
Bulk (C/U/R) 100% ¥400
Total Box EV ~¥6,000
Metric Value
Box Market Price ¥15,500 (~$105)
Expected Value ~¥6,000 (~$41)
EV Ratio ~39%
Break-even Pull Charizard ex SAR or Charizard UR + good SR

The Charizard ex SAR alone contributes ~¥2,000 to the EV (33% of total) despite appearing in only 1-in-24 boxes. Most boxes return ¥2,000-4,000 in sellable cards, but that one Charizard SAR box returns ¥51,000+.

Singles vs Box — The Math

Strategy Cost What You Get Best For
1 Box ¥15,500 1 SR+ card, 3 ARs, 4 RRs, opening experience Collectors who enjoy the hunt
Charizard SAR single ¥47,800 Guaranteed chase card Collectors who want certainty
Top 3 singles ~¥58,660 Charizard SAR + UR + Pidgeot SAR Completing the highlights
4 Boxes (SAR odds) ¥62,000 ~1 SAR pull (not guaranteed Charizard) High-risk gamblers
Opening experience Priceless Everyone

Where to Buy Japanese SV3 Boxes

Samurai Sword INC ships Ruler of the Black Flame boxes directly from Tokyo with tracked delivery. Every box is serial-tracked — if a box shows signs of search or reseal, we trace it to the source and permanently ban that supplier.

For a full comparison of reliable sources for Japanese Pokemon cards, see our complete buying guide.

View SV3 Ruler of the Black Flame Box →

Shipping & Import Guide

  • Shipping: Tracked international shipping from Tokyo
  • US Customs: Pokemon cards are classified as printed matter — no import duty for shipments under $800 (de minimis threshold)
  • UK/EU: VAT may apply on arrival depending on declared value
  • Delivery time: 5-14 business days to most destinations

For the full guide including proxy services and other buying methods, see How to Buy Japanese Pokemon Cards from Japan.

The Bottom Line

Three things to remember about Ruler of the Black Flame in March 2026:

  1. Charizard ex SAR at ¥47,800 is climbing, not falling — up 6.7% in one week, with PSA 10 copies surging 33% to ¥69,300. The 30th anniversary effect is real and accelerating.
  1. Box EV sits at ~39% of market price (¥6,000 vs ¥15,500), which is standard for Pokemon TCG products. The guaranteed Art Rares provide a value floor, while the Charizard SAR contributes 33% of total EV from just 1-in-24 boxes.
  1. This is one of the few SV-era sets still appreciating — most sets lose value after year one. SV3 prices are rising because the Charizard ex SAR has become a modern benchmark card, and the 30th anniversary is creating a catalyst that benefits iconic Pokemon above all others.
Cleffa AR from Ruler of the Black Flame

For an overview of where SV3 fits among all Japanese booster boxes, see our best Japanese Pokemon booster box guide.

Shop Ruler of the Black Flame →

View complete Ruler Of Black Flame card list →

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Ruler of the Black Flame?

Each box guarantees 1 SR-or-above card, 3 Art Rares (AR), and 4 Double Rares (RR). The chance of pulling a Special Art Rare (SAR) is approximately 25% per box (1 in 4 boxes). For a specific SAR like Charizard ex, the odds drop to roughly 1 in 24 boxes. Ultra Rare (UR) cards appear in approximately 1 in 20 boxes. These are community-estimated rates, not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Is Ruler of the Black Flame worth buying in 2026?

For Charizard collectors, the risk-reward profile is strong. The Charizard ex SAR at ¥47,800 (~$325) can pay for three boxes in a single pull, and prices are actively climbing ahead of the 30th anniversary. Box prices at ¥15,500 (~$105) are moderate for an SV-era set with elite chase cards. The guaranteed Art Rares (Ninetales ¥1,880, Cleffa ¥1,380) provide a value floor in every box.

How much is the Charizard ex SAR from SV3 worth?

As of March 2026, the Charizard ex SAR (134/108) trades at ¥47,800 (~$325) for raw copies in Japan (source: Altema/Card Rush). PSA 10 graded copies sell for approximately ¥69,300 (~$470). The English equivalent (Obsidian Flames Charizard ex SIR) trades at roughly $15-20, making the Japanese version 15-20x more valuable.

What’s the difference between Ruler of the Black Flame and Obsidian Flames?

Ruler of the Black Flame (SV3) is the Japanese version, released July 28, 2023. Obsidian Flames is the English international equivalent, released August 11, 2023. They share the same card pool, but Japanese cards command significantly higher prices — the JPN Charizard ex SAR trades at ¥47,800 (~$325) versus approximately $15-20 for the English version. This gap reflects superior print quality, texture, and collector demand for Japanese editions.

How many SAR cards are in one Ruler of the Black Flame box?

Most boxes contain zero SAR cards — only about 25% of boxes include one. The six SARs in the set are Charizard ex, Pidgeot ex, Eiscue ex, Revavroom ex, Omodaka, and Poppy. Each box guarantees at least one SR-or-above card (usually an SR, with SAR and UR as rarer possibilities). Roughly 5% of boxes are “2-hit boxes” containing two SR+ cards.

Is the Charizard ex SAR a good investment for PSA 10 grading?

PSA 10 copies have surged from ¥52,000 to ¥69,300 in one month (+33%), driven by 30th anniversary demand. With a PSA 10 acquisition rate of 89.1%, the grading success rate is high. The raw-to-PSA-10 premium sits at roughly 45% (¥47,800 raw vs ¥69,300 graded). Historically, Charizard cards appreciate during anniversary milestones — but past performance does not guarantee future results, and grading costs plus turnaround times should factor into your calculation.



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OP-15 giapponese o inglese: quale versione comprare

The Japanese OP-15 box is trading at ¥9,000 (~$58). The English box pre-orders are running $85–$120. Same cards, same pull rates — but the JPN version costs roughly 40–50% less, shipped from Japan.

So why would anyone wait for English?

Because tournament legality, card language, and resale markets all differ between versions. And with OP-15 “Adventure on KAMI’s Island” possibly being one of the last sets with staggered release dates — Bandai plans to unify global launches sometime in 2026 — the JPN-vs-EN question matters more right now than it ever has.

We ship OP-15 boxes from Tokyo every week. Here’s the data-backed breakdown: box prices, card-level price comparisons, print quality differences, tournament rules, and a clear recommendation based on what you’re actually trying to do with these cards.

Quick Answer
Your Goal Buy Why
Collecting / display Japanese 40% cheaper boxes, superior print quality, earlier access
Competitive play (US/EU) English Tournament-legal in Western regions
Both collecting and playing JPN now + EN singles later JPN for collection, EN singles for your deck
Grading investment Japanese Thicker cardstock, higher PSA 10 rates

~$58
JPN Box

$85–$120
EN Box

32–52%
JPN Savings

Apr 3
EN Release

OP-15 at a Glance — JPN vs EN Specs

Two versions of the same set, but the packaging and timing differ significantly.

Release Timeline & Pack Structure

Spec Japanese English
Release Date February 28, 2026 April 3, 2026
Pre-Release March 27, 2026
MSRP (BOX) ¥5,280 (~$34) ~$119.99
Market Price (BOX) ¥9,000 (~$58) $85–$120 (pre-order)
Packs per BOX 24 24
Cards per Pack 6 12 (includes EB-04)
Total Tipi di carte 125 + 1 DON!! 159+ (OP-15 + EB-04)
Card Language Japanese English

Prices as of March 2026. JPN market price from SNKRDUNK. EN pre-order prices from major US retailers. USD at ~¥155.

A key structural difference: the English release merges OP-15 with EB-04 (Extra Booster) content, resulting in more card types per box. The Japanese version keeps them separate.

What’s in the Set — Skypiea’s Biggest Moments

OP-15 covers the Skypiea arc — Enel, the golden bell, and the first time the Straw Hats faced something godlike. Six new Leaders including Purple Enel (already dominating Japanese tournaments) and the first-ever Brook Leader card.

OP-15 Adventure on KAMI's Island Japanese booster box featuring Skypiea arc artwork
OP-15 Japanese Booster Box — Adventure on KAMI’s Island

The chase cards are headlined by the Enel Comic Parallel at ¥138,000–160,000 (~$890–$1,030) and a Devil Fruit Pattern SP series featuring six characters with their actual Devil Fruit texture across the card face.

For the complete card rankings and pull rate data, see our OP-15 Pull Rates, Best Cards & Box Value guide.

Price Comparison — How Much Does Each Version Actually Cost?

JPN boxes cost 32–52% less than EN pre-orders. The gap is even wider on singles.

Box Prices: JPN vs EN

Metric Japanese English Difference
MSRP ¥5,280 (~$34) ~$119.99
Current Market Price ¥9,000 (~$58) $85–$120 JPN is 32–52% cheaper
Price per Pack ~$2.42 ~$3.54–$5.00 JPN is 32–52% cheaper
Sealed Case (12 boxes) ~$696 ~$1,020–$1,440 JPN saves $324–$744

The JPN box at $58 is one of the better deals in the current OPTCG sealed market. For context, OP-14 JPN boxes traded at ¥7,500–8,500 (~$48–$55) during the same post-launch window.

Single Card Prices — Same Card, Different Price Tag

Based on the JPN market data we track daily and historical JPN-to-EN price ratios from recent sets (OP-13, OP-14), here’s what to expect:

Card Rarity JPN Price (¥) JPN (~USD) EN Est. ($) JPN Savings
Enel (Comic Parallel) SEC/SP ¥138,000–160,000 $890–$1,030 $1,500–$3,000+ 50–70%
Boa Hancock (Devil Fruit Pattern) SP ¥52,800 $341 $500–$800 32–57%
Monkey D. Luffy (Devil Fruit Pattern) SP ¥37,800 $244 $400–$700 38–65%
Gum Gum Golden Rifle (Alt Art) R/P ¥32,800 $212 $300–$500 29–58%
Roronoa Zoro (Alt Art) SR/P ¥11,800 $76 $100–$200 24–62%

JPN prices: SNKRDUNK / Fuji Card Shop, February–March 2026. EN estimates based on OP-13/OP-14 JPN-to-EN ratios where EN cards typically command 1.5–3x the JPN price for high-rarity cards.

Why the gap? Two factors. First, Japan prints more volume — the domestic supply chain is shorter and more abundant. Second, English-speaking markets concentrate demand on a single language version, pushing EN prices higher. The OP-13 Manga Rare Ace went from ~$1,200 JPN to $4,000+ EN. That 2–3x multiplier is consistent across recent sets.

Key Takeaway

If you want OP-15 chase cards for your collection and don’t need English text, buying JPN singles now saves 30–70% compared to waiting for EN release.

Card Quality & Print Differences

The manufacturing process differs between regions — and the results are measurable.

Cardstock, Texture & Foil

Japanese OPTCG cards use a thicker, more rigid cardstock that resists warping better than the English print run. The difference is noticeable when you handle both versions side by side:

  • Cardstock thickness: JPN cards feel sturdier. English cards tend to curve more easily in humid conditions
  • Foil application: JPN foil layers are more precise — the metallic effects on parallels and SPs have sharper definition
  • Color saturation: JPN prints show higher contrast, especially on dark illustrations like the Enel Comic Parallel
  • Centering consistency: JPN quality control produces more evenly centered cards out of the pack
Japanese vs English One Piece card print quality comparison showing cardstock thickness and foil detail
JPN (left) vs EN (right) — note the foil definition and color saturation difference

Grading Potential (PSA 10 Rates)

For collectors who submit to PSA or CGC, the cardstock difference translates directly to grades. Japanese cards arrive in better condition from the factory — fewer edge nicks, less surface wear, tighter centering. While neither Bandai nor PSA publishes official grade distributions by region, the community consensus (and our own submission experience) points to JPN cards achieving PSA 10 at a meaningfully higher rate.

Grading Tip

If you’re planning to grade an Enel Comic Parallel or a Hancock SP, the JPN version gives you better odds of hitting Gem Mint 10 — and PSA 10 premiums run 3–5x over PSA 9.

Tournament Legality — Can You Play JPN Cards in the West?

Short answer: not in official Bandai tournaments. The official tournament rules specify language requirements by region.

Regional Rules at a Glance

Region Tournament-Legal Version Notes
Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand Japanese JPN is the native version
US, Canada, Latin America English JPN cards cannot be used
Europe, UK English JPN cards cannot be used
Australia, New Zealand English JPN cards cannot be used

No exceptions at official Bandai events. If competitive play is your primary reason for buying cards, you need the English version for Western tournaments.

The “Practice Deck” Strategy

Here’s what competitive players actually do: buy JPN cards for testing, then pick up EN versions for tournament play.

OP-15 launched in Japan on February 28. The English release isn’t until April 3. That’s a five-week window where JPN cards are the only way to physically test the new meta. Purple Enel is already the most-winning Leader in Japanese tournaments — players who build and practice with JPN cards now will have a serious edge when EN drops.

Practice Deck Budget

A playable Purple Enel build using JPN singles runs roughly $30–$60 for the core cards. That’s a small investment for five weeks of meta knowledge. Check Limitless for OP-15 decklists.

Who Should Buy Japanese? Who Should Buy English?

The answer depends entirely on what you’re doing with these cards.

Buy Japanese If…

You’re a collector focused on art and quality. JPN cards look better, feel better, and cost less. The Devil Fruit Pattern SPs in particular are showcase cards — the texture work on Hancock’s Mero Mero no Mi and Luffy’s Gomu Gomu no Mi is more vivid on the JPN print. You’re paying less for a higher-quality product.

You want the best value per dollar. At $58 per box versus $85–$120, JPN boxes give you more product for less money. If you’re opening multiple boxes, the savings compound fast — a sealed case (12 boxes) saves $324–$744 compared to EN.

You’re a grading investor. The cardstock advantage directly affects PSA 10 rates. JPN versions of chase cards also carry a “first printing” premium for some collectors, and the earlier release date means you lock in prices before EN hype pushes demand higher.

Buy English If…

You play in Western tournaments. Non-negotiable. You need EN cards for official Bandai events in the US, Canada, Europe, and Oceania. No amount of savings justifies owning cards you can’t play.

You prefer reading the card text. OPTCG card effects can be complex — if you’re learning the game or don’t want to reference translations mid-match, English text removes that friction.

Your local community plays EN. Casual play groups and local game stores in the West typically use English cards. Matching your community makes trading and borrowing easier.

Buy Both If…

You want the best of both worlds. The optimal strategy for a collector-player hybrid: buy a JPN box or JPN singles for your display collection and grading submissions, then pick up EN singles for the specific cards you need in your competitive deck.

OP-15 buying recommendation chart showing Japanese for collectors and English for competitive players
Persona-based buying recommendation for OP-15
Persona Version Budget Estimate What You Get
Collector JPN box x 1-2 $58–$116 Superior quality, earlier access, better value
Competitive Player EN singles $30–$100 Tournament-legal deck cards only
Collector + Player JPN box + EN singles $88–$216 Collection + competitive deck
Grading Investor JPN singles (chase cards) $200–$1,000+ Higher PSA 10 odds, lower entry cost

The 2026 Factor — Will Simultaneous Releases Change Everything?

Bandai announced that all ONE PIECE CARD GAME products will release simultaneously worldwide starting at some point in 2026. The exact starting set hasn’t been confirmed.

What “Simultaneous Release” Actually Means

No more five-week gaps between JPN and EN launches. When the switch happens, both versions will hit shelves on the same day globally. The EN card pool will catch up to JPN in real time.

OP-15 may be one of the last sets — possibly the last — with a staggered release. OP-16 (Paramount War, June 12) is also expected to have a gap, but the simultaneous launch could begin as early as OP-17 in late 2026.

Why JPN Cards Keep Their Edge

Even after simultaneous releases begin, the core advantages of JPN cards remain:

  • Print quality: Manufacturing happens at different facilities. JPN cardstock and foil quality won’t change because the release date aligns
  • Price advantage: JPN’s larger domestic supply and shorter distribution chain keep prices lower. This is structural, not timing-related
  • JPN-exclusive products: Anniversary sets, promo cards, and certain parallel variants remain Japan-only regardless of release synchronization
  • Grading edge: Cardstock quality is a manufacturing difference, not a timing one
Bottom Line

The simultaneous release eliminates the “early access” advantage. Everything else stays the same. If you’ve been buying JPN cards for quality and price, nothing changes.

One more factor: April 2026 introduces Standard Rotation, removing Block 1 cards (OP-01 through OP-04) from competitive play. OP-15 sits in Block 4, meaning it has a long competitive lifespan ahead.

Our Verdict

Three facts drive the decision:

  1. JPN boxes cost 32–52% less and contain the same cards at higher print quality
  2. EN cards are required for competitive play in the US, Europe, Canada, and Oceania
  3. OP-15 may be one of the last staggered releases — the early-access window is closing

If collecting is your priority, buy Japanese. The quality is better, the price is lower, and the chase cards (especially the Enel Comic Parallel and Devil Fruit Pattern SPs) look their best on JPN cardstock.

If competing is your priority, buy English — but consider grabbing JPN singles now to practice the OP-15 meta before the April 3 EN launch.

If you want both, the hybrid approach works: JPN box for your collection, EN singles for your tournament deck. Total cost: roughly $88–$216 depending on how deep you go.

OP-15 brings the Skypiea arc to OPTCG for the first time. Purple Enel is already rewriting the competitive format in Japan. The Devil Fruit Pattern SPs are some of the most visually distinctive cards the game has produced. Whichever version you choose, this is a set worth owning.

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OP-15 Adventure on KAMI’s Island Booster Box (Japanese)
From ~$58 / ~¥9,000
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are Japanese One Piece cards worth more than English?

Generally, no — Japanese cards are cheaper for the same card due to higher domestic supply. English versions often trade at 1.5–3x the JPN price because Western demand concentrates on a single language version. However, for graded cards (PSA 10), Japanese versions can command premiums due to superior cardstock quality.

Can I use Japanese OP-15 cards in English tournaments?

No. Official Bandai tournaments in North America, Europe, and Oceania require English-language cards. Japanese cards are legal only in Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Indonesia, and Thailand. Casual play groups may allow mixed languages — check with your local community.

Is the card quality different between Japanese and English OP-15?

Yes. Japanese cards use thicker cardstock with tighter quality control on centering and foil application. The difference is especially visible on parallel and SP cards where foil layers are more precisely applied on JPN prints. This quality gap has been consistent across all OPTCG sets.

Should I buy OP-15 Japanese now or wait for the English release?

It depends on your goal. Collectors save 30–70% buying JPN now. Competitive players need EN cards but can buy JPN for practice during the five-week gap. Grading investors benefit from JPN’s higher PSA 10 potential. There’s no wrong answer — just different strategies for different goals.

Will OP-15 be the last set with separate JPN and EN release dates?

Possibly. Bandai announced simultaneous worldwide releases starting in 2026, but hasn’t confirmed which set begins the change. OP-16 (June 2026) is expected to still have a gap. The switch may happen with OP-17 or later.

How much cheaper is a Japanese OP-15 box compared to English?

As of March 2026, JPN boxes trade at ¥9,000 (~$58) while EN pre-orders run $85–$120. That’s a 32–52% savings on the JPN side. For a sealed case of 12 boxes, you’d save approximately $324–$744 by going Japanese.

Does OP-15 have different pull rates in Japanese vs English?

Bandai doesn’t publish official pull rates for either version. Community opening data suggests comparable rates for both, though the English version merges OP-15 and EB-04 card pools, which affects the distribution of specific cards within each pack. For detailed JPN pull rate estimates, see our OP-15 Pull Rates guide.


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S10A Dark Phantasma probabilità di trovare carte, Migliori carte e guida alla box (2026)

The Japanese S10A Dark Phantasma set has one card that defines its entire collector identity: Akari’s Pikachu Character Rare at 073/071, currently trading at ¥5,980 raw and ¥31,600 PSA 10 on altema.jp. It’s the only Pikachu Character Rare ever paired with a Pokemon Legends: Arceus protagonist, and it has been the set’s undisputed #1 chase card since launch in May 2022.

S10A Dark Phantasma is the Japanese enhanced expansion pack that bridges the Sword & Shield Pokemon TCG with the Pokemon Legends: Arceus story. It introduced six Character Rares featuring Hisui region characters — Akari, the Miss Fortune Sisters, Rei, Vessa, Kamado, and Mani — alongside Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR, Hisuian Goodra VSTAR, Magnezone VSTAR, and a tight 71-card main set focused entirely on Hisui forms. The set has been out of print since 2023, and supply has been shrinking ever since.

This guide breaks down the full S10A picture: all 10 most valuable cards ranked by Altema April 2026 prices, pull rate estimates from PokéPatch’s 114-pack opening sample, box EV math using current JPN data, the JPN S10a vs English Astral Radiance distinction that confuses most international buyers, and a 4-year price trajectory showing why current market sits around ¥12,500 per box. We handle Japanese Pokemon TCG boxes every week from Tokyo — here’s what we tell collectors asking about Dark Phantasma.

Key Takeaway

S10A Dark Phantasma is the only Pokemon TCG set with the Akari’s Pikachu CHR (073/071), a Japanese-exclusive Character Rare currently at ¥5,980 raw / ¥31,600 PSA 10. With six Hisui region Character Rares, Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR, and a tight 99-card pool, S10A delivers the highest CHR-per-box density in the Sword & Shield era. Out of print since 2023.

~$42
Top Card (Akari Pikachu CHR)

~$85
BOX Market Price

20 Packs
Per Box (6 cards each)

99 Cards
Total Set

What Is S10A Dark Phantasma? Set Overview

S10A Dark Phantasma (ダークファンタズマ) is the Japanese enhanced expansion pack (強化拡張パック) released on May 13, 2022 as the dedicated TCG companion to Pokemon Legends: Arceus. While S10P Space Juggler and S10D Time Gazer (released earlier in 2022) covered the broader Sinnoh/Hisui transition, S10A is the focused Hisui-only release: every major Hisuian form gets a V or VSTAR treatment, and the secret rare pool is built around six Character Rares featuring Legends: Arceus story characters.

Set Specs

Detail Value
Set Code S10A
Japanese Name ダークファンタズマ
Series Sword & Shield
Category Enhanced Expansion Pack (強化拡張パック)
Release Date May 13, 2022
Packs per Box 20
Cards per Pack 6 (2 holos guaranteed)
Main Set 71 cards
Secret Rares 28 cards (6 CHR, 10 SR, 2 CSR, 7 HR, 3 UR)
Total Cards 99
MSRP ¥4,400 → Market price: ~¥12,500 (~$83) as of April 2026

Enhanced Expansion Pack Structure

Enhanced expansion packs like S10A use the same 20-pack format as S10B Pokemon GO. Three things distinguish them from regular S-series expansion packs (S11 or S12): 20 packs per box instead of 30, 6 carte per pack instead of 5, and a guaranteed two-holo pack structure that puts a Pokemon V-or-better card in every pack alongside a reverse holo. That’s 40 holo cards per box, double the density of standard expansions.

The trade-off: total card pool is smaller (99 vs 127 for S11), and only one SR-or-higher is guaranteed per box instead of the 1.2+ average from regular expansions. But the double-holo pack structure makes every pack feel like a hit pack — which is why enhanced expansions remain the most fun JPN boxes to open for casual buyers.

The Six Character Rares — Hisui Region Story Cast

S10A’s defining feature is the six Character Rares (072–077), each pairing a Pokemon with a Pokemon Legends: Arceus story character:

  • 072 Parasect (Mani) — Mani is the elderly Diamond Clan member from the Coronet Highlands. Parasect references his bug-collecting role.
  • 073 Pikachu (Akari) — Akari is the female protagonist of Legends: Arceus. The set’s #1 chase. ~¥5,980 raw / ~¥31,600 PSA 10.
  • 074 Gengar (Miss Fortune’s Sisters) — Charm, Clover, and Coin are the Miss Fortune trio of bandits. Gengar fits their mischief perfectly.
  • 075 Hisuian Arcanine (Rei) — Rei is the male protagonist counterpart to Akari. Hisuian Arcanine ties to his fire-type signature.
  • 076 Spiritomb (Vessa) — Vessa is the Pearl Clan member tied to ghost types in the game.
  • 077 Snorlax (Kamado) — Kamado is the leader of the Galaxy Expedition Team. Snorlax is his iconic partner.

This is the highest CHR density of any Sword & Shield enhanced expansion. S11A Incandescent Arcana has Character Rares too (Serena, Skyla, Furisode Girl), but S10A is the only set where the entire CHR slot is built around a single video game’s story cast.

Why S10A Still Matters in 2026

Three reasons: the set has been out of print since 2023, Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 has revived broad collector demand for character-focused Sword & Shield era cards, and Akari’s Pikachu has emerged as one of the most iconic Pikachu prints of the modern era. For Pikachu master collectors building a complete CHR collection, the JPN S10A box is the only sealed product that drops Akari’s Pikachu — the card simply does not exist in the English Astral Radiance set in CHR form.

JPN Exclusive

All 6 Character Rares (072–077) are Japanese-only treatments. The English Astral Radiance set bundles cards from S10, S10P, and S10a, but does not include the JPN-exclusive CHR rarity tier. For Pikachu master collectors worldwide, the JPN S10A box is the only sealed product that can produce Akari’s Pikachu CHR.

Top 10 Most Valuable S10A Dark Phantasma Cards

Akari’s Pikachu CHR sits at the top of the value chart at roughly ¥5,980 (~$40) on altema.jp, with the second-place Miss Fortune’s Sisters Gengar CHR close behind at ¥5,480. The top 10 below uses current JPN market data from Altema (April 2026), with USD conversions at approximately ¥150/USD.

Akari's Pikachu CHR 073/071 from S10A Dark Phantasma — the JPN-exclusive #1 chase card
Akari’s Pikachu CHR (073/071) — ~¥5,980 raw / ~¥31,600 PSA 10
Rank Card Number Rarity JPN Price (¥) USD Price
1 Pikachu (Akari) 073/071 CHR ¥5,500–5,980 ~$37–40
2 Gengar (Miss Fortune’s Sisters) 074/071 CHR ¥4,200–5,480 ~$28–37
3 Snorlax (Kamado) 077/071 CHR ¥1,800–2,580 ~$12–17
4 Gallade V (Beni) 089/071 CSR ¥1,200–1,680 ~$8–11
5 Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR 097/071 UR ¥1,000–1,380 ~$7–9
6 Enamorus V (Cogita) 088/071 CSR ¥1,000–1,480 ~$7–10
7 Dark Patch 098/071 UR ¥800–1,180 ~$5–8
8 Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR 092/071 HR ¥600–980 ~$4–7
9 Box of Disaster 099/071 UR ¥500–800 ~$3–5
10 Volo 084/071 SR ¥400–600 ~$3–4
Price Note

Prices from altema.jp, SNKRDUNK, and Card Rush as of April 2026. USD conversions at ~¥150/USD. Secondary market prices. JPN Character Rares typically have no English equivalent — the Astral Radiance ENG set does not include the CHR rarity tier.

#1 Akari’s Pikachu CHR (073/071) — ~$37–40

Akari’s Pikachu Character Rare is the card that defines S10A. Akari is the female protagonist of Pokemon Legends: Arceus — the most-played Pokemon RPG of 2022 with over 14 million copies sold worldwide — and this CHR is the only TCG card that pairs her with the franchise’s mascot. The illustration shows Akari kneeling alongside Pikachu in a Hisui meadow, with mountains and a soft watercolor background that has become one of the most reproduced TCG art prints of the Sword & Shield era.

The card trades at ¥5,500–5,980 raw on altema.jp as of April 2026. PSA 10 graded copies sit much higher at ~¥31,600 (~$210), giving graders roughly a 5× return on the raw cost. That premium reflects how much collectors value high-grade copies of this specific card — Pikachu collectors building master sets pay aggressively for clean copies because the card’s edges and centering are notoriously hard to grade well.

Here’s the important detail no English guide explains: Akari’s Pikachu does not exist in the English Astral Radiance set in any form. The English release does not include the Character Rare rarity tier at all — it has Trainer Gallery cards (a separate concept) but no CHR-equivalent featuring Akari with Pikachu. For Pikachu master collectors worldwide, chasing the JPN S10A box is the only path to this card.

#2 Miss Fortune’s Sisters Gengar CHR (074/071) — ~$28–37

Miss Fortune's Sisters Gengar CHR 074/071 from S10A Dark Phantasma
Miss Fortune’s Sisters Gengar CHR (074/071) — ~¥4,200–5,480

The Miss Fortune Sisters — Charm, Clover, and Coin — are the bandit trio from Pokemon Legends: Arceus, and Gengar fits their mischief-focused identity perfectly. The CHR trades at ¥4,200–5,480 (~$28–37), making it the second-highest priced CHR in the set and one of the few JPN Sword & Shield era Gengar prints with collector-grade artwork. The illustration shows Gengar emerging from a swirling shadow with the three sisters silhouetted in the background.

Gengar consistently ranks in the top 5 most-collected ghost-type Pokemon, and modern Sword & Shield Gengar prints with Trainer associations are rare. For Gengar collectors, this card pairs naturally with VSTAR Universe’s Gengar VMAX HR and S11 Lost Abyss’s Gengar V SR.

#3 Kamado’s Snorlax CHR (077/071) — ~$12–17

Kamado's Snorlax CHR 077/071 from S10A Dark Phantasma
Kamado’s Snorlax CHR (077/071) — ~¥1,800–2,580

Kamado is the commander of the Galaxy Expedition Team in Pokemon Legends: Arceus — the player’s direct supervisor at Jubilife Village. The Snorlax CHR shows Kamado standing beside his sleeping partner with a Hisui forest backdrop. At ¥1,800–2,580 (~$12–17), it’s the most accessible of the three high-tier CHRs and a popular completionist target.

#4 Beni’s Gallade V CSR (089/071) — ~$8–11

The Character Super Rare (CSR) tier is a step above standard SR — Gallade V at ¥1,200–1,680 features Beni, the Pearl Clan member who specializes in psychic types. This is one of only two CSRs in the entire S10A set (the other is Cogita’s Enamorus V). For collectors who want both rarity tiers, the CSR pair complements the CHR collection.

#5 Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR UR (097/071) — ~$7–9

Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR UR 097/071 gold rare from S10A Dark Phantasma
Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR UR (097/071) — ~¥1,000–1,380

The gold-textured Ultra Rare Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR at ¥1,000–1,380 is S10A’s premier display card. The gold leafing treatment over Hisuian Zoroark’s ghost-normal type combo creates a striking metallic finish that pairs well with the Akari Pikachu CHR for a complete Hisui-themed binder page. Hisuian Zoroark is one of the most popular Hisui forms thanks to its unique typing and emotional backstory in Legends: Arceus.

#6 Cogita’s Enamorus V CSR (088/071) — ~$7–10

The second CSR in the set features Cogita, the mysterious elderly woman tied to the Forces of Nature legend in Hisui. Enamorus V at ¥1,000–1,480 is the lower-priced of the two CSRs but has historical importance — Enamorus is one of the four Forces of Nature (alongside Tornadus, Thundurus, Landorus) and made its franchise debut in Pokemon Legends: Arceus.

#7 Dark Patch UR (098/071) — ~$5–8

One of three Ultra Rares in S10A, Dark Patch is a competitive trainer card that became a deck staple in the Sword & Shield era. The UR gold treatment at ¥800–1,180 makes it a collector pickup as well as a competitive ingredient.

Cards #8–10

Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR HR 092/071 rainbow rare from S10A Dark Phantasma
Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR HR (092/071) — ~¥600–980
  • Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR HR (092/071) (¥600–980 / ~$4–7) — The Hyper Rare rainbow rare version of the same Hisuian Zoroark VSTAR. Less premium than the UR but still a strong display card.
  • Box of Disaster UR (099/071) (¥500–800 / ~$3–5) — The third UR in the set, a Trainer item card with gold treatment. Lower competitive demand than Dark Patch.
  • Volo SR (084/071) (¥400–600 / ~$3–4) — Volo is the antagonist of Pokemon Legends: Arceus and one of the most iconic NPC trainers in modern Pokemon. The SR full art is the cheapest entry point into the Hisui character collection.

For the complete S10A card list with all 99 cards, see our S10A Dark Phantasma Lista carte page.

Should You Buy a Dark Phantasma Booster Box?

At ~$85 USD per box, S10A sits at one of the most accessible price points in the entire Sword & Shield enhanced expansion catalog — below S10B Pokemon GO (~$100) and well below S11A Incandescent Arcana. The buying decision hinges on which CHR you want and whether you value the Hisui character cast. Here’s the breakdown by buyer type.

Buyer’s Tip

If you want the Akari Pikachu CHR specifically, buying the single at ~$40 raw is far cheaper than chasing through boxes (~1 in 6.5 packs gets a CHR, but split across 6 different CHRs gives you ~1 in 40 packs for Akari Pikachu specifically — roughly 2 boxes per copy on average). For collectors who want multiple CHRs plus the Hisui experience, 2–3 boxes deliver the best value.

For Pokemon Legends: Arceus Fans

This is the most straightforward “yes” in the Sword & Shield catalog. If you played Legends: Arceus during its 2022 launch wave, S10A is the only TCG set built around the game’s story. Akari, Rei, Volo, Kamado, the Miss Fortune Sisters, Cogita, Beni, Iscan, Arezu, Mai — almost every named NPC from the game gets a card. The set is structured like a Hisui character roster, and opening a box is the closest thing to flipping through a Pokemon Legends: Arceus art book.

For Hisui Pokemon fans specifically, S10A is dense: Hisuian Zoroark V/VSTAR (in 4 different rarities), Hisuian Goodra V/VSTAR, Hisuian Electrode V, and Hisuian Arcanine CHR all appear. No other Sword & Shield set concentrates Hisuian forms this tightly.

For Pikachu Master Collectors

Akari’s Pikachu CHR is one of the most iconic Pikachu cards of the modern era. For collectors building a complete Pikachu master set across all languages, this card is required — and it only drops from the JPN S10A box. The English Astral Radiance set doesn’t include the CHR rarity tier, so there’s no English equivalent.

The math: with 6 different CHRs and ~3 CHRs per box (15.79% CHR rate in the reverse slot × 20 packs), you have roughly a 50% chance of pulling Akari Pikachu specifically per box opened. Two boxes brings the cumulative odds to ~75%, three boxes to ~88%. For Pikachu collectors who want a sealed-pull origin story, 2–3 boxes is the sweet spot.

For Long-Term Holders

S10A has been out of print since 2023. The current ~¥12,500 box price reflects steady appreciation from the ¥4,000 floor in early 2023 — roughly 3× over three years. Card Rush’s buy price sits around ¥9,000–10,000, which signals dealer confidence that prices will continue trending upward as supply decreases.

The 2026 Pokemon 30th anniversary is a tailwind for character-focused Sword & Shield era sets like this one. Modern character art has become a key collector category, and S10A’s Hisui story-focused cards have aged well in collector preference rankings.

Singles vs. Box — The Math

Approach Cost What You Get
Buy Akari Pikachu CHR single ~$37–40 The exact card, guaranteed
Buy 3 boxes for the Hisui experience ~$255 ~9 CHRs (likely 1–2 Akari Pikachu), 3 SRs, 3–6 VSTARs, 12+ Vs, 360 total cards, realistic chance at all 6 CHR characters
Buy 1 box for the chase ~$85 20 packs, 40 guaranteed holos, ~3 CHRs, 1 SR-or-higher, 50% odds on Akari Pikachu specifically

If you only want one specific card, singles win — the Akari Pikachu CHR is widely available at ~$40 and that’s cheaper than even one box. But if you want the Hisui story experience with realistic chances at multiple CHRs and the Hisuian VSTARs, 2–3 boxes is where the value lives.

S10A Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

S10A follows the enhanced expansion pack pull structure: 20 packs per box, 6 carte per pack, with 2 holos guaranteed per pack. That’s 40 holo cards per box. Pull rate estimates below are derived from PokéPatch’s 114-pack opening sample (the only public English source with S10A-specific data) cross-referenced with the standard enhanced expansion pack guarantee structure.

Pull Rate Breakdown (Per Pack — Holo Slot)

Rarity Rate Per 20-pack Box Notes
Holo Rare (R) 57.02% (1:2) ~11.4 Standard holo Pokemon
V (RR) 21.93% (1:4.5) ~4.4 Pokemon V cards
VSTAR (RRR) 10.53% (1:9.5) ~2.1 Hisuian VSTARs, Magnezone VSTAR, etc.
K (Radiant) 5.26% (1:19) ~1.0 Radiant Eternatus is the only Radiant in S10A
V Full Art (SR) 1.75% (1:57) ~0.35 10 V Full Arts in pool
Trainer SR 1.75% (1:57) ~0.35 Volo, Iscan, Arezu, Miss Fortune’s Sisters
UR / HR / CSR 1.75% (1:57) ~0.35 Combined HR/UR/CSR slot

Pull Rate Breakdown (Per Pack — Reverse Slot)

Rarity Rate Per 20-pack Box Notes
Character Rare (CHR) 15.79% (1:6.5) ~3.16 6 CHRs in pool: Akari Pikachu, Miss Fortune Gengar, Kamado Snorlax, Rei Hisuian Arcanine, Vessa Spiritomb, Mani Parasect
Reverse Holo ~84% ~17 Standard reverse holo
Disclaimer

Pull rates above are derived from PokéPatch’s 114-pack opening sample (June 2022) and the standard enhanced expansion pack guarantee structure. Sample size is limited (~6 boxes). Actual results vary. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Typical Box Yield

Combining the holo slot and reverse slot rates across 20 packs, a typical Dark Phantasma box delivers:

  • ~3 Character Rares — the headline pull, distributed across the 6-character CHR pool
  • ~2 VSTARs — usually 1 of the Hisuian VSTAR types plus a secondary
  • ~4 Pokemon V cards — the V tier is the most common holo slot pull
  • ~1 Radiant Eternatus — the set’s only Radiant Pokemon
  • ~1 SR/HR/UR/CSR combined — the high-rarity guarantee, weighted across the 22-card secret rare pool
  • ~11 Holo Rares — standard set holos

Akari Pikachu CHR — The Specific Odds

The number Pikachu collectors want: with a 15.79% CHR rate per pack and 6 CHRs in the pool, the per-pack chance for any specific CHR (assuming even distribution) is approximately 2.6%, or roughly 1 in 38 packs. Across a 20-pack box, that gives you about a 41% chance of pulling Akari Pikachu specifically — meaning ~2 boxes get you to ~65% cumulative odds, and 3 boxes get you to ~80%.

Note: real-world distribution may not be perfectly even across the 6 CHRs. PokéPatch’s sample showed slight variance, but with only 18 CHRs across 114 packs (~3 per box), the sample isn’t large enough to confirm whether one CHR is meaningfully rarer than others. We treat them as roughly even.

Box EV Breakdown

Using current Altema JPN prices and pull rate estimates, the expected value per box breaks down as follows:

Component Est. Value per Box
~3 CHRs (weighted avg by rarity tier) ~¥5,400 (~$36)
1 SR/HR/UR/CSR combined slot ~¥800 (~$5)
~2 VSTARs (RRR) ~¥500 (~$3)
~1 Radiant Eternatus ~¥300 (~$2)
~4 V cards (RR) ~¥400 (~$3)
Remaining R/U/C ~¥200 (~$1)
Standard Box EV ~¥7,600 (~$50)
EV Summary

Box cost: ~¥12,500 (~$85) | Average EV: ~¥7,600 (~$50). The CHR slot dominates EV (~70% of total) thanks to the ~3-CHR-per-box average and the high CHR price ceiling led by Akari Pikachu at ~$40. The single biggest driver of variance is whether Akari Pikachu specifically appears in the box.

S10A’s EV structure is unusual among S-series boxes: instead of being driven by a single SA chase card, EV is concentrated in the CHR slot. The ~3 CHRs per box give the set one of the most consistent EV floors in Sword & Shield, though the absolute EV ceiling is lower than chase-card-heavy sets like S11 Lost Abyss. For comparison, see our S10B Pokemon GO guide — the other Enhanced Expansion Pack from 2022 with very different value mechanics.

S10A vs English Astral Radiance (AR)

The JPN-to-ENG mapping for the Hisui-era Sword & Shield sets confuses most international buyers. Here’s how it actually works: the English Astral Radiance set (released May 27, 2022) is a bundled super-set that combines content from three separate Japanese releases — S10P Space Juggler, S10D Time Gazer, and S10A Dark Phantasma. AR has 216 cards. S10A on its own has 99.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Spec S10A Dark Phantasma (JPN) Astral Radiance (ENG)
Release May 13, 2022 May 27, 2022
Source Sets S10A only (Hisui-focused) S10P + S10D + S10A combined
Main Set Cards 71 189
Secret Rares 28 (6 CHR, 10 SR, 2 CSR, 7 HR, 3 UR) 27 (no CHR tier, has Trainer Gallery instead)
Total Cards 99 216
Packs per Box 20 36
Cards per Pack 6 (2 holos) 10
Total Cards per Box 120 360
MSRP ¥4,400 ~$144
Language Japanese English

What’s Different in the JPN Version

The biggest structural difference: the entire Character Rare (CHR) rarity tier is JPN-only. All 6 CHRs (072–077) including Akari’s Pikachu, Miss Fortune’s Sisters Gengar, and Kamado’s Snorlax simply do not exist in Astral Radiance in the same form. AR has Trainer Gallery cards (a separate concept introduced for the English release) but they use different artwork and don’t map 1:1 to the JPN CHRs.

The two CSRs (Beni’s Gallade V and Cogita’s Enamorus V) are also JPN-only treatments. AR contains the same Pokemon as Trainer Gallery cards, but the visual treatment and rarity classification differ.

Print quality is another factor. JPN Pokemon cards historically command a 15–40% premium over ENG versions of the same card, driven by superior holofoil textures, tighter centering, and the collector preference for original-language releases. For high-value CHRs specifically, the JPN version is the only version that exists, so there’s no direct premium comparison.

JPN-Exclusive Rarity Tier

The 6 Character Rares (072–077) and 2 CSRs (088–089) are Japanese-only. No English Astral Radiance equivalent exists. For Pikachu, Gengar, Snorlax master set collectors, the JPN S10A box is the only sealed product that can produce these CHR cards.

Which Version to Buy

  • Chasing Akari Pikachu CHR specifically? → JPN S10A box is the only option. The card doesn’t exist in English.
  • Want higher pulls per dollar? → ENG Astral Radiance gives you 360 cards per box for ~$130–150 vs JPN’s 120 cards per box for ~$85. More raw pulls at higher absolute box cost.
  • Building a Hisui-only collection? → JPN S10A is the focused product. AR mixes S10P/S10D Sinnoh content with the Hisui cards, diluting the Hisui-themed pull pool.
  • Want all Hisui form Pokemon in one box? → JPN S10A. Every major Hisuian form gets a V or VSTAR treatment in this single 71-card main set.

Most of our international buyers go JPN for one reason: they want a specific Character Rare. There is no other path to those cards in sealed product form.

Where to Buy S10A Dark Phantasma Booster Box

Authentic sealed S10A boxes remain available through Japanese TCG specialty retailers, but supply has been shrinking since the 2023 OOP designation. Verification matters more now than it did at launch.

What to Look For

  • Factory seal — Authentic S10A boxes have a white Creatures Inc. factory seal across the box opening. At ¥12,000+ price points, resealed boxes are a real concern from unverified sellers.
  • 20 packs per box — Enhanced expansion packs use a 20-pack format, not 30. A box should feel appropriately weighted (notably lighter than S11 or S12 boxes).
  • Japanese branding — The box should display ダークファンタズマ with Pokemon Company Japan branding and Pokemon Legends: Arceus motifs (Hisui mountain artwork).
  • Seller reputation — Purchase from sellers with a track record in Japanese Pokemon TCG. Legitimate boxes come from authorized Japanese distributors, not gray-market importers.

At Samurai Sword Tokyo, we stock sealed Japanese S10A Dark Phantasma boxes sourced directly from our Tokyo inventory with tracked international shipping. Stock fluctuates — check our product page for current availability.

Bottom Line

Three things to remember about S10A Dark Phantasma:

  1. Akari’s Pikachu CHR is JPN-only — the 073/071 Character Rare doesn’t exist in the English Astral Radiance set. For Pikachu master collectors, this is a required JPN purchase with no English alternative. The PSA 10 premium (~5× raw) reflects how much grading collectors value clean copies of this specific card.
  2. Six Character Rares create the highest CHR density in Sword & Shield — Akari, Miss Fortune Sisters, Kamado, Rei, Vessa, and Mani all appear as CHRs. With ~3 CHRs per box from a 6-character pool, every Dark Phantasma box delivers character-print value that no other S-series box matches.
  3. Out of print since 2023 with OOP appreciation curve — the box has tripled from its ¥4,000 floor in 2023 to ~¥12,500 in April 2026. Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 and ongoing Pokemon Legends: Arceus cultural staying power continue to support the appreciation trajectory.

At ~$85 per box, S10A is one of the most accessible OOP Japanese sealed products in the Sword & Shield era. Whether you open it for the Hisui story experience, chase the Akari Pikachu CHR, or hold sealed for long-term appreciation, the set earned its place as the dedicated TCG companion to Pokemon Legends: Arceus.

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Dark Phantasma (S10A) Booster Box
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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for S10A Dark Phantasma?

Each 20-pack box guarantees at least one SR-tier card. The holo slot rates from PokéPatch’s 114-pack sample: Holo Rare 57.02% (~11/box), V 21.93% (~4/box), VSTAR 10.53% (~2/box), Radiant 5.26% (~1/box), V Full Art SR 1.75% (~0.35/box), Trainer SR 1.75% (~0.35/box), HR/UR/CSR combined 1.75% (~0.35/box). The reverse slot has a 15.79% Character Rare rate, giving each box ~3 CHRs from the 6-card CHR pool. Pull rates are estimated from JPN opening data and not officially confirmed.

What is the most expensive card in S10A Dark Phantasma?

Akari’s Pikachu CHR (073/071) at approximately ¥5,500–5,980 (~$37–40 raw) as of April 2026. PSA 10 graded copies trade at ~¥31,600 (~$210). It’s a Japanese-exclusive Character Rare and does not exist in the English Astral Radiance set. Akari is the female protagonist of Pokemon Legends: Arceus.

Is the Japanese Dark Phantasma booster box worth buying in 2026?

At ~$85 per box, S10A offers the most accessible entry into out-of-print Japanese Sword & Shield sealed products. Expected value averages approximately $50, below box cost — standard for Pokemon TCG sealed products. The value proposition lies in the 6 Character Rares (~3 CHRs guaranteed per box), the Akari Pikachu CHR chase, and the OOP appreciation tailwind from Pokemon’s 30th anniversary. Best for collectors who value the Pokemon Legends: Arceus character cast or want a sealed-pull origin for Akari’s Pikachu.

How many packs are in a Dark Phantasma S10A booster box?

Each S10A box contains 20 packs, with 6 carte per pack — 120 total cards per box. Every pack guarantees 2 holographic cards, meaning each box delivers 40 holos total. This is the enhanced expansion pack (強化拡張パック) format, which differs from standard 30-pack expansions like S11 Lost Abyss or S12 Paradigm Trigger.

What’s the difference between Japanese S10A and English Astral Radiance?

S10A Dark Phantasma is the focused JPN release with 99 total cards (71 main + 28 secret) covering only Hisui-themed content. English Astral Radiance bundles three Japanese sets (S10P Space Juggler + S10D Time Gazer + S10A Dark Phantasma) into a 216-card mega-set. The biggest difference: the entire Character Rare (CHR) tier is JPN-only. All 6 CHRs including Akari’s Pikachu, Miss Fortune’s Sisters Gengar, and Kamado’s Snorlax do not exist in the English Astral Radiance set. Japanese print quality also carries a historical 15–40% premium over English on matched cards.

Who is Akari and why is her Pikachu card so valuable?

Akari is the female protagonist of Pokemon Legends: Arceus, the 2022 Switch RPG that sold over 14 million copies and reimagined the Pokemon franchise in the Hisui (ancient Sinnoh) region. Her Pikachu Character Rare is the only TCG card pairing her with the franchise mascot, and it has become one of the most iconic Pikachu prints of the modern era. The card’s value reflects three things: the Character Rare rarity tier, Pikachu’s universal collector demand, and the JPN-exclusive status (no English equivalent exists). PSA 10 copies trade at roughly 5× the raw price.

Is Dark Phantasma S10A out of print?

Yes. Production ended in 2023, and no reprints have been announced or released. Sealed box supply has been shrinking for 2+ years, which is the primary driver behind the current ~¥12,500 JPN price range — up from a ¥4,000 floor in early 2023. The out-of-print status combined with Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 has pulled renewed attention to character-focused Sword & Shield era sets like this one.


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