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Black Bolt (SV11B) Pull Rates & Hit Rates — Best Cards, DX & Box Value [2026]

Every Gen V Pokemon on a card. A brand-new rarity tier. And a Zekrom that commands ~$370 on the secondary market.

Black Bolt (SV11B) brought the entire Unova Pokedex back to the Pokemon TCG when it launched in Japan on June 6, 2025 — months before the English release hit shelves on July 18. Nine months later, this set remains one of the most talked-about expansions in the Scarlet & Violet era, thanks to its debut of the BWR (Black White Rare) rarity and a staggering 72 Art Rare cards.

Here’s what you need from this guide: the exact pull rates based on community opening data, the 10 most valuable cards with current JPN market prices, a transparent box EV breakdown, and a clear buying framework for collectors, players, and investors. We pull pricing directly from SNKRDUNK and Mercari — the two platforms where Japanese cards actually trade — so you’re getting numbers no English-language guide can match.

Our team at Samurai Sword ships Black Bolt boxes from Tokyo every week. This is the set through our eyes.

Key Takeaway

Zekrom ex BWR at ¥55,000 (~$370) is the crown jewel of the Scarlet & Violet era. With 72 Art Rares covering all 156 Unova Pokemon, every box delivers a rewarding opening experience. Box prices have rebounded to ~¥15,000, reflecting renewed collector demand as this set establishes itself as a modern classic.

~¥15,000
Box Price

86+
Cards

~1/4
SAR Rate

20
Packs/Box

What Is Black Bolt? — Set Overview

Black Bolt is the first half of a dual expansion celebrating Generation V — and its scope is unprecedented. Released alongside White Flare (SV11W), this set features all 156 Pokemon first discovered in the Unova region, each with at least one AR or SAR illustration.

Set Specs & Key Features

Spec Detail
Set Code SV11B
Release Date (JPN) June 6, 2025
Release Date (EN) July 18, 2025
MSRP ¥5,800 per box (20 packs) → Market price: ~¥15,000 (~$100 at ¥150/USD)
Cards per Pack 7
Packs per Box 20
Total Cards 86 (main set) + secret rares
New Rarity BWR (Black White Rare)
Special Feature All 156 Unova Pokemon receive AR or SAR

Prices as of March 2026. Secondary market prices.

Three things set Black Bolt apart from other Scarlet & Violet expansions. First, the BWR rarity — a monochromatic foil treatment exclusive to Black Bolt and White Flare that echoes the original Black & White era card design. Second, the sheer volume of Art Rares: 72 unique AR illustrations in a single set. Third, the God Pack — an extremely rare pull containing 6 ARs and 1 SAR in a single pack.

JPN vs International Release Timeline

Japan got Black Bolt on June 6, 2025. English-speaking markets received their version starting July 18, with products rolling out through August 22. One critical difference: the English release has no standalone booster boxes. EN products come only as Elite Trainer Boxes and Booster Bundles. The Japanese version? Standard 20-pack booster boxes with shrink wrap — the format collectors prefer for sealed investment and opening value alike.

Historically, Japanese Pokemon cards trade at a 15-40% premium over their English counterparts, particularly for SAR and chase rares. Black Bolt follows that pattern. If you’re exploring other recent JPN sets, our Inferno x guide covers another Scarlet & Violet expansion with strong collector appeal.

Top 10 Most Valuable Black Bolt Cards

Zekrom ex BWR leads the pack at ¥55,000 — down from its ¥61,000+ peak but still commanding the highest price in the set. Below is the current ranking based on Japanese secondary market prices as of March 2026.

Rank Card Rarity JPN Price USD Est.
1 Zekrom ex BWR ¥55,000 ~$370
2 Zekrom ex SAR ¥23,000 ~$153
3 Seismitoad AR ¥8,500 ~$57
4 N’s Plan SAR ¥7,000 ~$47
5 Kyurem ex SAR ¥4,300 ~$29
6 Serperior ex SAR ¥3,000 ~$20
7 Solosis AR ¥2,600 ~$17
8 Meloetta ex SAR ¥2,600 ~$17
9 Genesect ex SAR ¥2,300 ~$15
10 Victini AR ¥2,200 ~$15

Prices: SNKRDUNK / Mercari averages as of March 2026. USD converted at ~¥150/USD.

Zekrom ex BWR Black White Rare card from Pokemon Black Bolt SV11B
Zekrom ex BWR — the crown jewel of Black Bolt at ¥55,000

#1 Zekrom ex BWR — ¥55,000 (~$370)

The crown jewel of Black Bolt. Zekrom ex BWR is rendered in a monochromatic black-and-white palette that pays direct homage to the original Zekrom SR from the BW era. The BWR rarity is exclusive to Black Bolt and White Flare — no other Scarlet & Violet set has it, and future reprints look unlikely.

Pull rate data from the Japanese opening community suggests roughly 1 BWR card per 2-4 cartons (24-48 boxes). At that rarity level, most box openers will never see this card. Despite correcting from its ¥61,000+ peak, this card maintains strong collector conviction at ¥55,000 — now trading at parity with Reshiram ex BWR from White Flare.

For PSA 10 graded copies, expect to pay significantly more. Raw copies in Near Mint condition are the prices shown above.

#2 Zekrom ex SAR — ¥23,000 (~$153)

The more attainable Zekrom chase card — still rare at roughly 1 SAR per 4 boxes, but a realistic pull for anyone opening a case. The full-art illustration depicts Zekrom in a dynamic pose with dramatic lighting and texture work that showcases the quality advantage of Japanese printing.

This card serves double duty: competitive players want it for decks, and collectors want it for the art. That dual demand supports a steady price point around ¥23,000 — now slightly below Reshiram ex SAR (¥26,000) from White Flare.

#3 Seismitoad AR — ¥8,500 (~$57)

The sleeper hit of Black Bolt has now claimed the #3 spot. Illustrated by Kandashinji — the artist behind the legendary Giratina V SA and Magikarp AR — this Art Rare has surged from ¥1,000 at launch to ¥8,500. The artist factor continues to drive international collector attention, making this one of the most valuable Art Rares in the entire Scarlet & Violet era.

#4 N’s Plan SAR — ¥7,000 (~$47)

N is arguably the most popular human character in Pokemon history, and his Supporter card “N’s Plan” gets the SAR treatment with an illustration featuring the iconic Nimbasa City Ferris wheel. After correcting significantly from its ¥14,800 peak, this card has stabilized at ¥7,000 — making it a more accessible entry point for Gen V fans seeking a premium N card.

N's Plan SAR Special Art Rare card from Pokemon Black Bolt SV11B featuring Nimbasa Ferris wheel
N’s Plan SAR — Gen V nostalgia at its finest

#5-#10 Quick Picks

#5 Kyurem ex SAR — ¥4,300 (~$29)
A gorgeous depiction of Kyurem surrounded by ice crystals. Strong character recognition and competitive viability keep this SAR above the ¥4,000 line.

#6 Serperior ex SAR — ¥3,000 (~$20)
The Unova starter trio fans have wanted a proper SAR treatment, and Serperior delivers. Up 50% from its ¥2,000 low — Gen V completionists are driving renewed demand.

#7 Solosis AR — ¥2,600 (~$17)
A surprise entrant to the top 10. This adorable Psychic-type’s Art Rare has climbed steadily on collector appeal and its distinctive illustration style.

#8 Meloetta ex SAR — ¥2,600 (~$17)
Meloetta singing among ruins and blooming flowers — the first full-art Meloetta illustration in years.

#9 Genesect ex SAR — ¥2,300 (~$15)
Genesect’s “Metal Signal” Ability makes this a playable card in competitive decks, giving it steady demand beyond pure collection value.

#10 Victini AR — ¥2,200 (~$15)
The Victory Pokemon’s Art Rare rounds out the top 10. Victini’s popularity across the franchise ensures consistent collector demand.

Should You Buy a Black Bolt Box?

Black Bolt is one of the strongest collector sets in the Scarlet & Violet era — and the answer depends on your goals.

For Collectors — The Best Reason to Buy

This set was built for collectors. All 156 Unova Pokemon get Art Rare or Special Art Rare illustrations — a first in Pokemon TCG history. Every box guarantees multiple AR pulls (typically 4 per box), so the opening experience is consistently rewarding regardless of whether you hit a SAR or BWR.

The BWR rarity adds a chase element that’s genuinely exclusive. Unlike SARs or URs that appear in every modern set, BWR exists only in Black Bolt and White Flare. For anyone building a Gen V collection, these cards are essential — and they’ll likely never be reprinted.

Collector Tip

If you grew up with Pokemon Black & White, this is the set. For MEGA era collectors, check out our Mega Dream EX guide or Ninja Spinner guide.

For Players — Competitive Staples Inside

Zekrom ex, Kyurem ex, and Genesect ex all see competitive play in current tournament formats. N’s Plan is a versatile Supporter that fits into multiple deck archetypes. The standard RR versions are readily available in every box, making Black Bolt a practical choice for players building competitive decks on a budget.

For Investors — Timing and Context

Black Bolt boxes have rebounded to ~¥15,000 on SNKRDUNK after correcting from their ¥18,000 pre-release peak to the ¥9,000 range. The recent upward move signals renewed collector conviction. Two factors favor continued demand: 2026 marks the Pokemon TCG’s 30th anniversary, and Black Bolt’s limited print run means supply is structurally constrained.

Monitor the SNKRDUNK price chart for your ideal entry point.

JPN Box vs EN Products — Why Japanese Matters

JPN (Black Bolt)

  • 20-pack Booster Box format
  • Shrink-wrapped, sealed
  • ~¥15,000 (~$100) market price
  • Premium print quality & texture
  • Higher sealed investment appeal

EN (Black Bolt)

  • ETB & Booster Bundle only
  • No standalone booster box
  • ~$55-70 (ETB) market price
  • Standard print quality
  • Lower sealed investment appeal

The biggest structural advantage of JPN Black Bolt: it’s the only way to get a sealed booster box. The English release never produced standalone booster boxes. Based on our daily handling of JPN sealed product, print quality differences are visible to the naked eye.

Black Bolt Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

Black Bolt is one of the better-positioned sets for box EV in the Scarlet & Violet era. The vast majority of Pokemon TCG booster boxes have a negative expected value relative to market price — this is standard. The entertainment value, guaranteed Art Rare slots, and chase potential all contribute beyond pure financial EV.

Pull Rates by Rarity

Rarity Pull Rate Per Box Per Carton
BWR ~1/24-48 boxes ~0.03 ~0.25-0.5
SAR ~1/4 boxes ~0.25 ~3
SR ~1/1.2 boxes ~0.83 ~10
AR ~4/box ~4 ~48
RR ~4-5/box ~4-5 ~48-60
Master Ball Holo ~1/box ~1 ~12
Black Bolt SV11B pull rate visualization showing BWR, SAR, SR, AR, and RR rates per box
Black Bolt pull rate estimates per box — based on community opening data

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

Pull Rate Summary

Every box guarantees ~4 Art Rares + 4-5 RR Pokemon ex. SR fires in ~5 of 6 boxes. SARs appear ~1 per 4 boxes. A carton is the sweet spot for SAR hunters. BWR is ultra-premium — treat it as a bonus, not an expectation.

Box Expected Value (EV) Calculation

Component Rate/Box Avg Value EV
BWR 0.03 ¥55,000 ¥1,650
SAR (high) 0.07 ¥15,000 ¥1,050
SAR (mid-low) 0.18 ¥2,640 ¥475
SR 0.83 ¥600 ¥498
AR (high: Seismitoad) 0.06 ¥8,500 ¥510
AR (standard) 3.94 ¥300 ¥1,182
RR + below 15+ ¥50 ¥750
Master Ball Holo 1 ¥300 ¥300
Total EV ~¥6,415
Black Bolt SV11B box EV breakdown showing value contribution by rarity tier
Black Bolt box EV breakdown — total ~¥6,415 vs box price ~¥15,000

BOX market price: ~¥15,000. EV ratio: ~43%. Based on SNKRDUNK/Mercari transaction prices as of March 2026.

Singles vs Box — What Makes Sense

Approach Cost for Zekrom BWR Risk
Buy Single ¥55,000 (~$370) None — guaranteed
Open Boxes (avg 33) ¥495,000 (~$3,300) High variance
Opening Experience Priceless

For most collectors: open a few boxes for the experience, buy singles for the chase cards. Pulling Art Rares of your favorite Unova Pokemon, the chance at a SAR, the dream of a God Pack — that’s what box opening is really about.

Where to Buy Japanese Black Bolt Boxes

The JPN box format is the only way to get a sealed 20-pack booster box — and it’s available with international shipping from Japan-based retailers.

Buying from Samurai Sword

We ship Black Bolt boxes directly from Tokyo with full tracking and packaging designed for international delivery. Every box is verified authentic with intact shrink wrap, and each one is serial-tracked — if a searched or resealed box is ever reported, we trace it back to the supplier and permanently remove them. From our experience shipping to the US, UK, CA, and AU, delivery typically takes 5-10 business days.

Shipping & Import Tips

  • Shipping: Tracked international shipping from Tokyo. 5-10 business days to major markets.
  • Import duty: Pokemon cards are classified as printed goods. US orders under $800 are generally duty-free. UK/EU orders may incur VAT.
  • Packaging: Protective padding to prevent corner damage. Shrink wrap integrity preserved.
Important Note

The English release of Black Bolt never produced standalone booster boxes — only ETBs and Booster Bundles. Importing JPN boxes directly is the only way to get the standard box format.

For a side-by-side comparison of all current Japanese booster boxes, see our Best Japanese Pokemon Booster Boxes 2026 ranking. For importing tips, see our guide to buying Japanese Pokemon cards from Japan.

Shop This Set
Black Bolt Booster Box (SV11B)
From ~$100 / ~¥15,000
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

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The Bottom Line

Three things to remember about Black Bolt:

  1. The BWR rarity is historically unique. Zekrom ex BWR at ¥55,000 sits among the most valuable cards in the Scarlet & Violet era, and its exclusive rarity tier means no future set dilutes its status.
  2. Every box delivers collector value. With 4 guaranteed Art Rares per box covering the full Unova Pokedex, the opening experience is rewarding even without hitting a SAR or BWR.
  3. Box prices reflect growing demand. The rebound from ¥9,000 to ¥15,000 signals renewed collector conviction. With Pokemon TCG’s 30th anniversary in 2026 and tightening sealed supply, this momentum could continue.

If you’re a Gen V fan, a JPN card collector, or someone who appreciates the craft of Pokemon card illustration — Black Bolt deserves a spot on your shelf.

Shop This Set
Black Bolt Booster Box (SV11B)
From ~$100 / ~¥15,000
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

View Product →

View complete Black Bolt card list →

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Black Bolt?

Based on community opening data, you can expect approximately 4 Art Rares per box, 1 SR every 1.2 boxes, 1 SAR every 4 boxes, and 1 BWR every 24-48 boxes. Every box also contains roughly 4-5 RR Pokemon ex and 1 Master Ball holo. These rates are estimated from Japanese opening reports and not officially confirmed.

What is the most expensive card in Black Bolt?

Zekrom ex BWR at approximately ¥55,000 (~$370) as of March 2026. This card features the exclusive BWR (Black White Rare) rarity — a monochromatic foil treatment found only in Black Bolt and White Flare. The extreme scarcity (estimated 1 per 24-48 boxes) and Gen V nostalgia sustain its premium pricing.

Is Black Bolt worth buying?

For collectors, Black Bolt offers exceptional value through 72 unique Art Rares covering all Unova Pokemon, multiple SAR chase cards, and the exclusive BWR rarity. Box EV runs approximately ¥6,415 against a market price of ¥15,000. While the EV gap is wider than at launch pricing, the opening experience is consistently rewarding thanks to guaranteed AR pulls in every box, and sealed box appreciation potential adds value beyond EV.

What is BWR rarity in Pokemon cards?

BWR stands for “Black White Rare,” a special rarity tier introduced exclusively in Black Bolt (SV11B) and White Flare (SV11W). BWR cards feature a monochromatic foil treatment that pays homage to the original Pokemon Black & White card designs. Only three BWR cards exist: Zekrom ex (Black Bolt), Reshiram ex (White Flare), and Victini (White Flare).

What is the difference between Black Bolt and White Flare?

Black Bolt (SV11B) and White Flare (SV11W) are companion sets released simultaneously. Black Bolt features Zekrom ex BWR as its flagship card, while White Flare features Reshiram ex BWR and Victini BWR. Each set has its own pool of SARs, SRs, and ARs — though both draw from the complete 156-Pokemon Unova Pokedex.

Will Black Bolt cards go up in value?

Historical patterns suggest potential for appreciation: 2026 is Pokemon TCG’s 30th anniversary, previous milestone years saw broad price increases, and Black Bolt’s limited print run creates structural scarcity. That said, secondary market prices are never guaranteed — past performance does not ensure future results.

How many SAR cards are in Black Bolt?

Black Bolt contains 7 SAR (Special Art Rare) cards: Zekrom ex, N’s Plan, Kyurem ex, Meloetta ex, Genesect ex, Serperior ex, and Excadrill ex. At an estimated pull rate of 1 SAR per 4 boxes, targeting a specific SAR has roughly a 3.5% chance per box.


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Related Guides

White Flare (SV11W) Pull Rates & Hit Rates — Best Cards, DX & Box Value [2026]

Reshiram ex BWR has surged to ¥55,000. All 156 Unova-region Pokemon received their own Art Rare or Special Art Rare. And a brand-new rarity tier — BWR (Black White Rare) — debuted with this set.

White Flare (SV11W), released alongside its counterpart Black Bolt on June 6, 2025, remains one of the most collector-friendly expansions in the Scarlet & Violet era. Nine months after launch, box prices corrected from their initial ¥20,000 peak and have since rebounded to approximately ¥14,000 ��� reflecting renewed collector demand as the set establishes itself as a modern classic.

This guide covers everything you need to decide whether a White Flare box belongs in your collection: the top 10 most valuable cards with current JPN market prices, pull rate data from 700+ pack openings, a full box EV breakdown, and a head-to-head comparison with Black Bolt. Our team handles White Flare boxes daily from our Tokyo warehouse, and every price in this article reflects live SNKRDUNK and Mercari transaction data as of March 2026.

Key Takeaway

White Flare offers the strongest collector value in the SV11 pair. Reshiram ex BWR leads the JPN market at ¥55,000, and the set’s seven SAR cards — including Hilda SAR by illustrator Saito Naoki — give every box a meaningful shot at a premium pull. Box prices have rebounded to ~¥14,000 as collector demand solidifies around this set’s unique BWR rarity.

~¥14,000
Box Price

86+
Cards

~1/4
SAR Rate

20
Packs/Box

White Flare — Set Overview

White Flare gives every Unova Pokemon a dedicated AR or SAR card — making it one of the most comprehensive collector sets in the Scarlet & Violet era.

Release Date, Price & Pack Contents

Spec Detail
Set Name White Flare (ホワイトフレア)
Set Code SV11W
Series Scarlet & Violet
JPN Release June 6, 2025
ENG Release July 18, 2025
MSRP ¥5,800 → Market price: ~¥14,000 (March 2026)
Packs / Box 20
Cards / Pack 7
Total Cards 86 + Secret Rares
Counterpart Set Black Bolt (SV11B)

What’s New — BWR Rarity & Full Unova Dex

BWR (Black White Rare) is an entirely new rarity tier introduced exclusively in the SV11 pair. Only one BWR card exists per set — Reshiram ex BWR in White Flare, Zekrom ex BWR in Black Bolt. The BWR treatment applies a monochromatic black-and-white finish with metallic texturing that sets it apart from every other rarity in the Scarlet & Violet era.

Beyond BWR, the set delivers seven SAR cards, multiple SRs, and a staggering 72 Art Rares. Community opening data suggests the overall “hit rate” across both sets is roughly 50% per pack — one of the most generous pull rates in recent Pokemon TCG history.

JPN vs International Timeline

Both White Flare and Black Bolt released internationally on July 18, 2025, about six weeks after the Japanese launch. Unlike some JPN sets that get restructured for EN release, these sets maintained their identity as separate expansions. JPN cards historically carry a 15-40% price premium over their EN counterparts for high-rarity pulls, driven by print quality, earlier availability, and collector demand for Japanese-text cards.

Top 10 Most Valuable White Flare Cards

Reshiram ex BWR commands the highest price in the set at ¥55,000, followed by a deep bench of SARs and standout ARs. Every price below reflects SNKRDUNK and Mercari transaction data as of March 2026.

Rank Card Rarity JPN Price (¥) Note
1 Reshiram ex BWR ¥55,000 Set chase card — monochrome metallic finish
2 Reshiram ex SAR ¥26,000 Full-art illustration, second-highest pull
3 Hilda (Touko) SAR ¥8,800 Illustrated by Saito Naoki
4 Hydreigon ex SAR ¥4,500 Dynamic full-art, strong competitive card
5 Oshawott AR ¥3,500 Starter popularity, highest-value AR
6 Hilda (Touko) SR ¥3,300 Supporter card, trainer collector demand
7 Keldeo ex SAR ¥2,600 Mythical Pokemon appeal
8 Jellicent ex SAR ¥2,600 Unique artwork, niche collector appeal
9 Zoroark AR ¥2,200 Fan-favorite Unova Pokemon
10 Zorua AR ¥1,700 Pre-evolution of Zoroark, cute art

#1 — Reshiram ex BWR (¥55,000)

The Reshiram ex BWR defines White Flare. Trading at approximately ¥55,000 on SNKRDUNK, this card sits in the upper tier of chase cards across the entire Scarlet & Violet series. The BWR treatment transforms Reshiram into a striking monochrome composition with metallic black-and-white texturing — a finish that exists nowhere else in the modern Pokemon TCG.

Pull rate data from community openings places BWR at roughly 1 in 22 boxes (approximately 2 cartons). That scarcity drives collector demand, but the card’s value goes beyond rarity alone. A confirmed misprint variant has surfaced in early print runs, and collectors tracking misprints expect it to become one of the set’s long-term premium cards. At launch, this card opened above ¥80,000, corrected to the ¥40,000 range, and has since rebounded to ¥55,000 — demonstrating strong collector conviction.

For context, Zekrom ex BWR from the counterpart set Black Bolt now trades at approximately ¥55,000 as well — the gap has closed completely. Reshiram’s broader cultural recognition and the misprint factor have driven this convergence.

Reshiram ex BWR 174/086 White Flare SV11W Pokemon card monochrome metallic
Reshiram ex BWR — White Flare’s chase card

#2 — Reshiram ex SAR (¥26,000)

The SAR version of Reshiram ex offers a full-art illustration that rivals the BWR in visual impact. Trading at approximately ¥26,000, this card represents the “realistic” chase for most box openers — with SAR pull rates of roughly 1 in 4 boxes, the odds of pulling any SAR are meaningfully better than BWR. The seven-SAR pool means your specific odds of landing Reshiram ex SAR sit around 1 in 28 boxes, but any SAR pull from this set carries solid value.

Compared to Zekrom ex SAR from Black Bolt (~¥23,000), the Reshiram ex SAR now trades at a premium — a reversal from the early months when Black Bolt’s version led.

Reshiram ex SAR 168/086 White Flare SV11W Pokemon card full art illustration
Reshiram ex SAR — full-art illustration, the realistic chase at ¥26,000

#3 — Hilda (Touko) SAR (¥8,800)

Hilda SAR has settled into a stable range after its post-launch correction. Illustrated by Saito Naoki — the artist behind iconic cards like Lillie and Marnie — this trainer SAR benefits from both character popularity and artist recognition. Currently trading around ¥8,800, Hilda SAR offers one of the more accessible entry points for a Saito Naoki trainer SAR in the modern era.

Trainer SARs with Saito Naoki’s signature style have historically held value well across multiple sets. For collectors prioritizing long-term appreciation, this card at its current price represents one of the more compelling picks in the White Flare lineup.

Hilda Touko SAR 173/086 White Flare SV11W Pokemon card illustrated by Saito Naoki
Hilda (Touko) SAR — illustrated by Saito Naoki, trading at ¥8,800

#4-10 Quick List

Hydreigon ex SAR White Flare SV11W

Hydreigon ex SAR
¥4,500

Oshawott AR White Flare SV11W

Oshawott AR
¥3,500

#4 Hydreigon ex SAR (¥4,500) — The dark/dragon-type pseudo-legendary in a dynamic SAR composition. Strong competitive play presence keeps demand steady among both collectors and players.

#5 Oshawott AR (¥3,500) — The highest-value Art Rare in the set. Unova starter nostalgia drives consistent demand, and the AR pull rate makes it a realistic box pull.

#6 Hilda SR (¥3,300) — The standard Super Rare version of Hilda. Trainer collector demand keeps this above most SRs in the set.

#7 Keldeo ex SAR (¥2,600) — Mythical Pokemon with a dedicated fanbase. The water/fighting typing and elegant art give this card lasting appeal.

#8 Jellicent ex SAR (¥2,600) — A niche but visually distinctive SAR. The ghost/water typing and unique composition appeal to collectors seeking variety.

#9 Zoroark AR (¥2,200) — One of Generation V’s most popular Pokemon. The Art Rare treatment suits Zoroark’s dark aesthetic, and collector demand from the Illusion Pokemon’s fanbase keeps prices firm.

#10 Zorua AR (¥1,700) — Zoroark’s pre-evolution rounds out the top 10. The cute-factor art style and connection to #9 make it a common collector pairing.

White Flare vs Black Bolt — Which Should You Buy?

This is the most common question around these sets, and the answer depends on what you’re after. Both sets share identical pack structures (20 packs, 7 cards) and the same rarity system including BWR. The difference lies in the chase cards and the audience each set serves best.

Chase Card Comparison

Category White Flare Black Bolt
#1 Chase (BWR) Reshiram ex ¥55,000 Zekrom ex ¥55,000
#2 Chase (SAR) Reshiram ex ¥26,000 Zekrom ex ¥23,000
#3 Chase (SAR) Hilda ¥8,800 N’s Plan ¥7,000
Top 3 Total Value ¥89,800 ¥85,000
BOX Market Price ~¥14,000 ~¥15,000
BOX EV ~¥9,200 ~¥8,900

The BWR gap has closed completely — both Reshiram and Zekrom BWR now trade at ¥55,000. White Flare edges ahead on top-3 total value (¥89,800 vs ¥85,000) thanks to Reshiram SAR’s ¥26,000 price point. Both sets now command similar box prices (~¥14,000 vs ~¥15,000), reflecting equally strong collector demand.

For Collectors vs For Players

🇯🇵 White Flare — For Collectors

  • Reshiram BWR monochrome finish
  • Hilda SAR by Saito Naoki
  • Misprint variant collector interest
  • Stronger aesthetic & artist pedigree

⚡ Black Bolt — For Players

  • Zekrom ex sees more competitive play
  • Stronger tournament-viable cards
  • Similar box price (~¥15,000)
  • Higher individual chase card values

Can’t decide? Both sets share the same pull rate structure. The collector community is roughly split, though White Flare commands a slight premium on box price — a signal that the market values its collector appeal higher.

For Black Bolt’s full card rankings and pull rates, see our Black Bolt Pull Rates & Best Cards Guide. For a broader comparison of top JPN sets, see our Ninja Spinner Pull Rates Guide.

Should You Buy a White Flare Box?

White Flare stands out as one of the strongest collector sets in the SV11 generation. Here’s how it breaks down by buyer profile.

For Collectors

Collector Tip

At current box prices around ¥14,000, you’re getting the same set that launched at ¥20,000. The opening experience is identical, and entry cost has settled from the launch premium. The ~50% hit rate per pack means you’re pulling something notable in every other pack.

White Flare is built for you. The combination of a brand-new rarity tier (BWR), seven SAR cards illustrated by top artists including Saito Naoki, and 72 Art Rares covering every Unova Pokemon creates one of the most art-rich opening experiences in the Scarlet & Violet era.

Even without a BWR or SAR, the guaranteed AR and SR slots provide a baseline of collectible cards. From our experience shipping White Flare boxes from Tokyo, this set consistently generates positive feedback from international collectors. The Reshiram BWR and Hilda SAR are the most-requested cards from this set in our customer inquiries.

For Investors

White Flare boxes have moved through the typical post-launch correction and are now rebounding. The initial ¥20,000 price reflected hype and limited supply; the current ¥14,000 range reflects renewed collector demand as the set’s long-term appeal becomes clear.

Historical patterns from comparable sets suggest that limited-production JPN expansion packs tend to appreciate once production ends and inventory dries up. White Flare’s collector-friendly card pool — particularly the BWR chase card and Saito Naoki trainer SARs — positions it well for long-term demand.

Monitor SNKRDUNK and Mercari for continued momentum. The recent rebound from ¥10,000 to ¥14,000 with steady transaction volume indicates growing collector conviction around this set.

For Players

White Flare contains several playable cards, though Black Bolt edges it out for competitive utility. Reshiram ex and Hydreigon ex both see play in specific archetypes. If you’re building decks, buying singles from the top 10 list above may deliver better value than opening boxes. However, the set’s generous pull rates mean a box purchase isn’t unreasonable if you’re also interested in the collector aspects.

Singles vs Box

Factor Buy Singles Buy a Box
Target a specific card Full control over which card you get Random — 1-in-22 for BWR
Cost efficiency Pay market price for exactly what you want EV is ~66% of box price
Collecting the set Expensive to complete — 86+ cards 140 cards per box, good coverage
Opening experience None Priceless

Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

White Flare’s pull rates are among the most generous in recent Pokemon TCG history. Community data from 700+ pack openings reveals a roughly 50% hit rate per pack — meaning every other pack contains a card above standard rarity. That said, every sealed product carries variance, and understanding the EV structure helps set realistic expectations.

Pull Rates by Rarity

Rarity Per-Pack Rate Per-Box Estimate (20 packs) Cards in Set
BWR Black White Rare ~0.23% ~4.5% (1 in 22 boxes) 1
SAR Special Art Rare ~1.25% ~25% (1 in 4 boxes) 7
SR Super Rare ~5.8% ~1 per box 8
AR Art Rare ~16.4% ~3-4 per box 72
RR Double Rare ~21.1% ~4 per box 6
Master Ball Foil ~5.1% ~1 per box 72+
White Flare SV11W pull rate visualization showing BWR, SAR, SR, AR, and RR rates per box
White Flare pull rate estimates per box — based on 700+ pack openings
Pull Rate Note

These rates are estimated based on community opening data from 700+ packs across both SV11 sets. They are not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Box EV Calculation

The following EV estimate uses JPN secondary market prices as of March 2026.

Rarity Cards/Box Avg Card Value (¥) EV Contribution (¥)
BWR 0.045 ¥55,000 ¥2,475
SAR (weighted avg) 0.25 ¥6,786 ¥1,697
SR 1.0 ¥1,500 ¥1,500
AR 3.5 ¥550 ¥1,925
RR 4.0 ¥250 ¥1,000
Master Ball Foil + Bulk ¥600
Total Box EV ~¥9,197
White Flare SV11W box EV breakdown showing value contribution by rarity tier
White Flare box EV breakdown — total ~¥9,197 vs box price ~¥14,000
EV Summary

Box market price: ~¥14,000 → EV ratio: ~66%. A negative EV gap is standard across Pokemon TCG sealed products. The box market price includes the premium for sealed, untouched product — the same premium that makes unopened boxes appreciate over time.

Variance & What to Expect

The EV table above represents a statistical average across hundreds of boxes. Individual results vary dramatically:

  • Floor scenario (most boxes): SR + 3-4 ARs + 4 RRs + Master Ball Foil = approximately ¥3,800-4,400 in card value. The guaranteed SR and AR slots provide a baseline that prevents total loss.
  • Good scenario (~25% of boxes): Pull a SAR. Average SAR value of ¥6,786 pushes total box value to ¥9,000-11,000 — closing the gap with the box price.
  • Great scenario (~4.5% of boxes): Pull the Reshiram ex BWR. A single BWR turns any box into a significant positive outcome at ¥55,000+.

The key takeaway: SRs and ARs create a value floor, SARs bring you close to breakeven, and BWR is the upside that makes sealed box collecting exciting. Treat BWR as a bonus, not an expectation.

Where to Buy White Flare Boxes

Japanese White Flare booster boxes ship internationally with full tracking — and the JPN format is the only way to experience BWR pulls in their original Japanese printing. JPN cards have historically maintained a 15-40% price premium over their EN counterparts.

When buying from Japan, factor in:

  • Shipping: Tracked international shipping from Tokyo typically runs ¥1,500-3,000 depending on destination
  • Customs/Import tax: Varies by country (US: generally duty-free under $800; UK: 20% VAT above £135; AU: 10% GST above AUD $1,000)
  • 상태: Sealed, shrink-wrapped boxes ensure authenticity

Our team at Samurai Sword ships White Flare boxes directly from our Tokyo warehouse with full tracking and insurance. Every box is verified sealed with original shrink wrap and assigned a unique serial number — if a searched or resealed box is ever reported, we trace it back to the source and permanently remove that supplier from our network.

The Bottom Line

Three things to know about White Flare in March 2026:

  1. Reshiram ex BWR at ¥55,000 is the set’s crown jewel, with a confirmed misprint variant adding long-term collector interest. Pull rate sits at roughly 1 in 22 boxes.
  2. Box prices have rebounded to ~¥14,000 — showing renewed collector demand after the post-launch correction from ¥20,000.
  3. Seven SAR cards with a ~25% hit rate per box give every opening a meaningful shot at a premium pull. Reshiram SAR at ¥26,000 now leads its Black Bolt counterpart.

If you’re a collector drawn to Generation V nostalgia, premium art, and the thrill of chasing a BWR, White Flare at today’s prices is one of the strongest propositions in the current JPN market.

Comparing boxes? See our full best Japanese Pokemon booster box ranking for head-to-head comparisons of all current sets.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for White Flare?

Based on community data from 700+ pack openings, BWR appears in roughly 1 in 22 boxes (4.5% per box), SAR in approximately 1 in 4 boxes (25%), and SR at about 1 per box. Art Rares average 3-4 per box. The overall hit rate of ~50% per pack is among the highest in recent Pokemon TCG sets. These are estimated rates, not officially confirmed.

What is the most expensive card in White Flare?

Reshiram ex BWR is the most valuable card, trading at approximately ¥55,000 (~$370 USD) on SNKRDUNK as of March 2026. A confirmed misprint variant exists and may command higher prices as collectors identify and grade them. The second most valuable card is Reshiram ex SAR at approximately ¥26,000.

Is White Flare or Black Bolt better to buy?

It depends on your goal. White Flare is generally preferred by collectors — Reshiram BWR, Hilda SAR by Saito Naoki, and the broader art appeal make it the aesthetic choice. Black Bolt is preferred by players — Zekrom ex and other competitive cards see more tournament play. Both BWR cards now trade at ¥55,000, but White Flare leads on top-3 total value (¥89,800 vs ¥85,000). Both sets command similar box prices (~¥14,000 vs ~¥15,000).

How many SAR cards are in White Flare?

White Flare contains 7 Special Art Rare (SAR) cards. The most valuable are Reshiram ex SAR (¥26,000), Hilda SAR (¥8,800), and Hydreigon ex SAR (¥4,500). Community opening data suggests a roughly 25% chance of pulling any SAR per box, meaning approximately 1 in 4 boxes will contain a SAR.

What is BWR rarity in Pokemon TCG?

BWR (Black White Rare) is a new rarity tier introduced exclusively in the SV11 sets (Black Bolt and White Flare). Each set contains exactly one BWR card — Reshiram ex in White Flare, Zekrom ex in Black Bolt. The BWR finish features a unique monochrome black-and-white metallic treatment. Pull rates are estimated at approximately 1 in 22 boxes (roughly 2 cartons), making it one of the rarest modern Pokemon card rarities.

Is White Flare worth buying in 2026?

At current box prices of approximately ¥14,000, White Flare offers strong value for collectors. The box EV sits at roughly ¥9,197, which is typical for Pokemon TCG sealed products. The real value proposition is the combination of generous pull rates (~50% hit rate per pack) and the chance at a ¥55,000 BWR chase card. Box prices have rebounded from ¥10,000 lows, signaling renewed collector demand. With Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 driving hobby interest, the set is well-positioned.

How much is a Reshiram ex BWR worth?

As of March 2026, Reshiram ex BWR trades at approximately ¥55,000 (~$370 USD) on SNKRDUNK. The card has rebounded strongly from its ¥40,000 low, driven by collector demand and a confirmed misprint variant in early print runs. For comparison, the counterpart Zekrom ex BWR from Black Bolt also trades at approximately ¥55,000 — the gap has closed completely.


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