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S11 Lost Abyss Pull Rates, Best Cards & Box Guide (2026)

The Giratina V SA from S11 Lost Abyss is the single most valuable card you can pull from a standard modern Japanese Pokemon TCG expansion — at roughly $984 raw and $1,700+ in a PSA 10 slab, it commands prices that rival vintage chase cards. Lost Abyss introduced the Lost Zone mechanic to the Sword & Shield era when it launched in July 2022, and 3.5 years later the sealed box trades at ¥33,000–37,500 (~$220–250) — nearly 7× its original retail price.

That box premium exists for one reason: every sealed box carries roughly a 3.8–6.2% chance of containing the Giratina V SA. Open sixteen boxes and you might pull one. Or you might find it in your first. That lottery is what keeps S11 among the most sought-after sealed products in the modern Japanese card market.

This guide breaks down the complete Lost Abyss picture: all 10 most valuable cards ranked by current JPN market prices, pull rate data translated from Japanese opening compilations, a box EV calculation, and 3.5 years of price history showing how this set survived a reprint crash and came back stronger. We ship hundreds of Japanese Pokemon TCG boxes monthly — here’s the data behind one of the most iconic sets we’ve handled.

Key Takeaway

S11 Lost Abyss is home to the ~$984 Giratina V SA — the most valuable card from any standard modern JPN expansion. At ~¥33,000–37,500/box (~$220–250), the chase card alone is worth 4–4.5× the box price. Production ended after the 2024 reprint, and the V-shaped price recovery from ¥5,000 to ¥35,000 confirms enduring demand.

$984
Top Card (Giratina V SA)

~$220–250
BOX Market Price

30 Packs
Per Box

127 Cards
Total Set

S11 Lost Abyss Set Overview

Lost Abyss is the set that brought the Lost Zone mechanic to Sword & Shield — and produced the most valuable card in the modern Japanese Pokemon TCG. Released on July 15, 2022, S11 packs 127 cards into a standard 30-pack box that has become one of the most premium sealed products in the hobby.

Set Specs

Spec Detail
Set Code S11
Set Name Lost Abyss (ロストアビス)
Series Sword & Shield
Category 확장팩
JP Release July 15, 2022
Packs per Box 30
Cards per Pack 5
Main Set 100 cards
Secret Rares 27 cards (12 SR incl. 4 SA, 8 HR, 3 UR, 4 Trainer SR)
Total Cards 127
MSRP ¥4,950 → Market price: ¥33,000–37,500 ($220–250) as of April 2026
EN Equivalent Lost Origin (partial — also includes S10A, S10D cards)

The Lost Zone Mechanic

Lost Abyss’s signature mechanic — the Lost Zone — sends cards to a separate zone from which they cannot be retrieved. Unlike the discard pile, cards in the Lost Zone are permanently removed from play. This created new deck strategies centered around accumulating cards in the Lost Zone to unlock powerful abilities, most notably Giratina VSTAR’s Star Requiem attack, which knocks out any opposing Pokemon if 10+ cards sit in your Lost Zone.

The mechanic proved so popular that Lost Zone-based strategies dominated the competitive Sword & Shield format through 2023. That competitive relevance, combined with the Giratina V SA’s artwork, created a dual demand pillar — both players and collectors want these cards.

What Makes This Set Special

  1. Giratina V SA (111/100). The most valuable card from any standard modern JPN expansion. Illustrated by Shinji Kanda, the alternate art depicts Giratina emerging from a portal between dimensions. At ~$984 raw and $1,700+ PSA 10, this card alone justifies the set’s sealed product premium.
  2. Four alternate art cards. S11 contains four Special Art variants: Giratina V SA, Aerodactyl V SA, Rotom V SA, and Galarian Perrserker V SA. The SA pull rate (~15% per box for any SA) keeps these cards genuinely scarce.
  3. Lost Zone competitive legacy. Giratina VSTAR, Comfey, and Mirage Gate formed the backbone of one of the most dominant deck archetypes in the Sword & Shield competitive era.

JPN vs English — The Lost Origin Connection

The English set Lost Origin combines cards from three Japanese sets: Lost Abyss (S11), Dark Phantasma (S10A), and Time Gazer (S10D). This dilutes S11’s concentrated card pool across a 196-card English set, significantly reducing your odds of pulling any specific S11 card.

JPN Premium

The Japanese Giratina V SA (~$984) commands a 70%+ premium over the English Lost Origin version (~$400–573). JPN cards from S11 consistently trade higher than their ENG equivalents, driven by superior print quality and a more focused 127-card pool.

Top 10 Most Valuable Lost Abyss Cards

The Giratina V SA towers over this set’s value chart at roughly 11× the price of the second-most valuable card. Here are the top 10 ranked by current JPN market data.

Giratina V SA 111/100 alternate art from S11 Lost Abyss — most valuable modern Japanese Pokemon card
Giratina V SA (111/100) — ¥180,000–218,000 (~$984)
Rank Card Number Rarity JPN Price (¥) USD Price
1 Giratina V (Alt Art) 111/100 SR (SA) ¥180,000–218,000 ~$984
2 Aerodactyl V (Alt Art) 106/100 SR (SA) ¥14,000–17,800 ~$87
3 Giratina VSTAR 125/100 UR ¥5,500–6,980 ~$23
4 Rotom V (Alt Art) 104/100 SR (SA) ¥2,200–2,780 ~$21
5 Giratina V 110/100 SR ¥2,200–2,780 ~$18
6 Giratina VSTAR 120/100 HR ¥2,700–3,580 ~$10
7 Aerodactyl V 105/100 SR ¥1,300–1,780 ~$8
8 Fantina 116/100 SR ¥900–1,580 ~$6
9 Aerodactyl VSTAR 118/100 HR ¥1,600–2,180 ~$5
10 Pidgeot V 112/100 SR ¥700–980 ~$4
Price Note

JPN prices from SNKRDUNK and altema.jp (April 2026). USD prices from PriceCharting. JPN cards typically trade at a 15–40% premium over English equivalents for high-demand cards.

#1 Giratina V SA (111/100) — ~$984

The Giratina V SA is the defining card of modern Japanese Pokemon — and the highest-value pull from any standard expansion box in the current era. At ¥180,000–218,000 on the Japanese secondary market (~$984 USD raw), it occupies a price tier usually reserved for vintage stars.

Illustrated by Shinji Kanda, the alternate art captures Giratina tearing through dimensional space with its six-legged, centipede-like Altered Forme on full display. The composition uses dramatic perspective — Giratina lunging toward the viewer through a shattered portal — creating a sense of motion that few Pokemon cards achieve.

PSA 10 copies trade at $1,700+, reflecting the grading market’s strong conviction. The Japanese version commands a 70%+ premium over its English Lost Origin counterpart (~$400–573).

#2 Aerodactyl V SA (106/100) — ~$87

Aerodactyl V SA 106/100 alternate art from S11 Lost Abyss
Aerodactyl V SA (106/100) — ¥14,000–17,800 (~$87)

The Aerodactyl V SA at ¥14,000–17,800 (~$87) shows the prehistoric Pokemon soaring above a fossil excavation site — a scene that connects Aerodactyl to its lore origins. This card has strong international demand, particularly among collectors who appreciate the paleontology-themed artwork. PSA 10 copies trade around $171.

#3 Giratina VSTAR UR (125/100) — ~$23

Giratina VSTAR UR Gold 125/100 from S11 Lost Abyss
Giratina VSTAR UR (125/100) — ¥5,500–6,980 (~$23)

The gold-textured Ultra Rare treatment of Giratina VSTAR at ¥5,500–6,980 (~$23) is a popular display piece. The Star Requiem VSTAR Power text gleams in gold relief. PSA 10 copies jump to ~$83, making it a viable grading candidate.

Cards #4–10

  • Rotom V SA (104/100) (¥2,200–2,780 / ~$21) — Competitive staple from Charizard ex decks. 3-draw ability maintained play demand well into Scarlet & Violet format.
  • Giratina V SR (110/100) (¥2,200–2,780 / ~$18) — Standard full-art version carrying the set mascot’s baseline collector appeal.
  • Giratina VSTAR HR (120/100) (¥2,700–3,580 / ~$10) — Rainbow rare hyper rare with full-texture holographic treatment.
  • Aerodactyl V SR (105/100) (¥1,300–1,780 / ~$8) — Standard full-art Aerodactyl. Clean artwork, accessible price.
  • Fantina SR (116/100) (¥900–1,580 / ~$6) — Female trainer full art with steady collector demand. PSA 10 at ~$35.
  • Aerodactyl VSTAR HR (118/100) (¥1,600–2,180 / ~$5) — Rainbow rare version of the fossil VSTAR.
  • Pidgeot V SR (112/100) (¥700–980 / ~$4) — Standard full-art V card.

For the complete S11 card list with images, see our S11 Lost Abyss 카드 리스트 보기 page.

Should You Buy a Lost Abyss Booster Box?

At $220–250 per box, S11 is a premium purchase — but the Giratina V SA alone is worth 4–4.5× the box price. Here’s how it breaks down by buyer type.

Buyer’s Tip

If you’re chasing the Giratina V SA specifically, buying the single at ~$984 saves thousands compared to opening boxes. But the ~15% SA pull rate per box means roughly 1 in 7 boxes contains a display-worthy alternate art — and that lottery is what keeps collectors opening.

For Collectors

Lost Abyss is one of those sets where one card defines the entire experience. The Giratina V SA at ~$984 creates a level of pack-opening tension that few modern sets can match. Every SR-slot pack is a potential $984 moment — and even without hitting the SA, the four trainer SRs and other alternate arts deliver display-worthy pulls.

S11 also carries historical weight as the set that introduced the Lost Zone mechanic. For collectors building a Sword & Shield era collection, this is a cornerstone set.

For Box Openers

Thirty packs at $220–250 means roughly $7–8 per pack. Each box guarantees at least one SR-tier pull (from the 16-card SR pool, which includes the four SAs). You’ll also pull approximately 4–5 RR cards, 2 RRR cards, and common/uncommon bulk.

The ~3.8–6.2% chance of pulling the Giratina V SA from a single box is the headline — but even a non-SA box delivers $20–40 in SR value plus the guaranteed RR/RRR cards. The 10% “double-hit” box probability adds extra excitement.

For Long-Term Holders

The sealed box trajectory tells a powerful story. S11 launched at ¥4,950, climbed steadily, crashed to approximately ¥5,000 after the June 2024 reprint, then recovered to ¥33,000–37,500 by early 2026. That recovery — from reprint floor back to 7× the original price — demonstrates the market’s conviction in this set’s long-term value.

Production is finished. The 2024 reprint was the last run. Every box opened or shipped reduces sealed supply permanently.

Singles vs. Box — The Math

Approach Cost What You Get
Buy Giratina V SA single ~$984 The exact card you want, guaranteed
Buy 16 boxes (avg for specific SA) $3,500–4,000 ~1 Giratina V SA + 3–4 total SA pulls + 480 other cards
Buy 1 box for the experience $220–250 30 packs + guaranteed SR-tier pull + ~3.8–6.2% SA lottery

Lost Abyss Pull Rates

S11 follows the standard Sword & Shield expansion pull rate structure — one guaranteed SR-tier card per box, with SA, HR, and UR cards requiring multiple boxes. The 30-pack format gives you more shots at the high-rarity pool than smaller Enhanced Expansion sets.

Pull Rate Breakdown (Per Box — 30 Packs)

Rarity Cards in Set Expected per Box Notes
RR ~12 4–5 V and VSTAR cards
RRR ~6 ~2 VSTAR and VMAX cards
SR 16 (incl. 4 SA) 1 guaranteed Full art V, trainers, and alternate arts
SA 4 ~1 per 6–7 boxes (~15%) Giratina V, Aerodactyl V, Rotom V, Galarian Perrserker V
HR 8 ~1 per 10 boxes (~10%) Rainbow rare treatment
UR 3 ~1 per 10 boxes (~10%) Giratina VSTAR, Lost Sweeper, Collapsed Stadium
Disclaimer

Pull rates are estimated from Japanese community opening compilations (oripagacha.com, SNKRDUNK). Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company. Actual results vary.

Giratina V SA — The Odds

Approximately 3.8–6.2% per box for the Giratina V SA specifically — roughly 1 in 16–26 boxes. Conservative estimates (oripagacha) place the rate at ~3.8% per box; SNKRDUNK data suggests ~6.2%. At carton level (12 boxes), Japanese opening data suggests approximately 2 total SA pulls, giving roughly a 50% chance of seeing the Giratina V SA in one carton.

“Double-Hit” Boxes

Approximately 10% of S11 boxes contain two secret rares instead of the standard one. These are randomly distributed and can contain any combination of SR, HR, or UR cards.

Box EV Breakdown

Every box of Pokemon cards has negative expected value on average — that’s standard across all TCG products. What matters for S11 is the Giratina V SA’s extreme value pulling the SA-weighted average substantially higher than most sets.

Component Est. Value per Box
1 SR/SA hit (SA-weighted avg.) ~¥7,500 (~$50)
4–5 RR cards ~¥600
2 RRR cards ~¥400
Remaining R/U/C ~¥200
SA-Weighted Box EV ~¥8,700 (~$58)
EV Summary

Box cost: ~¥33,000–37,500 ($220–250) | Average EV: ~¥8,700 ($58). The 15% SA probability — with the Giratina V SA at $984 — creates the widest SA-weighted upside of any Sword & Shield expansion. Standard SR-only EV is ~¥2,800 ($19).

The Giratina V SA’s extreme value ($984) means that a single SA pull transforms the entire box economics. For comparison, S12 Paradigm Trigger has a similar dynamic with the Lugia V SA ($510), and S11A Incandescent Arcana features the Serena SR ($75) at a smaller scale.

Where to Buy S11 Lost Abyss

Authentic S11 boxes are available through Japanese TCG specialty retailers with tracked international shipping. Given the set’s premium price point (~$220–250), verification is especially important.

What to Look For

  • Factory seal — Genuine S11 boxes have a white Creatures Inc. factory seal, not re-shrunk clear wrap. At this price point, resealed boxes are a real risk from unverified sellers.
  • 30 packs per box — Each pack contains 5 cards. A box should feel appropriately heavy and consistent in weight.
  • Japanese text on all packaging — The box should display the ロストアビス (Lost Abyss) branding with The Pokemon Company logo.
  • Seller verification — Purchase from established sellers with a track record in Japanese Pokemon TCG and verifiable sourcing from authorized Japanese distributors.

At Samurai Sword Tokyo, we stock sealed Japanese Lost Abyss boxes sourced directly from our inventory in Japan with tracked international shipping. Availability fluctuates — check our product page for current stock.

Bottom Line

Three things to remember about S11 Lost Abyss:

  1. The Giratina V SA ($984) is the engine — the most valuable card from any standard modern JPN expansion. It drives sealed box demand, determines box pricing, and creates the asymmetric upside that makes every opening tense.
  2. Supply is finite and shrinking — production ended after the 2024 reprint. The V-shaped price recovery from ¥5,000 to ¥33,000–37,500 reflects a market that recognizes permanent scarcity.
  3. Four alternate arts keep every box alive — the ~15% SA pull rate per box means roughly 1 in 7 boxes contains a display-worthy alternate art card.

At $220–250 per box, Lost Abyss sits in premium territory — but for a set containing a $984 chase card with proven appreciation over 3.5 years, the risk-reward balance is compelling. Whether you’re opening for the thrill or holding sealed for the long term, S11 has earned its place among the most important Sword & Shield era sets.

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Lost Abyss (S11) Booster Box
From ~$220–250 / ~¥33,000–37,500
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Lost Abyss?

Each 30-pack box guarantees at least one SR-tier card from a pool of 16 SRs (including 4 alternate arts). SA cards appear in approximately 15% of boxes (~1 in 6–7 boxes). HR cards appear ~10% of the time, and UR cards also ~10%. About 10% of boxes are “double-hit” boxes containing two secret rares. Pull rates are estimated from Japanese community opening data and not officially confirmed.

What is the most expensive card in Lost Abyss?

Giratina V SA (111/100) at approximately ¥180,000–218,000 (~$984 raw) as of April 2026. PSA 10 graded copies trade at $1,700+. It is the most valuable card from any standard modern Japanese Pokemon TCG expansion.

Is Lost Abyss worth buying in 2026?

At $220–250 per box, S11 is a premium set with the highest chase-card ceiling in the Sword & Shield era. Box EV (including SA probability) averages approximately $58, which is below box cost — standard for Pokemon TCG products. The value proposition lies in the ~3.8–6.2% chance of pulling a $984 Giratina V SA, the collector-grade artwork, and the sealed box’s appreciation trajectory.

How rare is the Giratina V SA in Lost Abyss?

Approximately 3.8–6.2% per box (roughly 1 in 16–26 boxes). At carton level (12 boxes), you can expect about 2 total SA pulls with roughly a 50% chance of seeing the Giratina V SA specifically.

What is the English equivalent of Lost Abyss?

Lost Origin (SWSH11) is the English equivalent, but it combines cards from three Japanese sets: S11 Lost Abyss, S10A Dark Phantasma, and S10D Time Gazer. The English version has 196 cards versus S11’s 127, diluting pull rates. The Japanese Giratina V SA commands a 70%+ price premium over the English version.

Is the Lost Abyss box price sustainable at $220–250?

The current price reflects post-reprint stabilization. After crashing to ~$35 following the June 2024 reprint, boxes recovered to $220–250 as supply was absorbed and the Giratina V SA continued appreciating. With production finished and no further reprints expected, the price is anchored by finite supply and the $984 chase card.


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