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Aura Seeker (Hadou Seeker) 完整指南:Mega Lucario Z、热门追卡 和发布信息 [2026]

Aura Seeker (Japanese: ハドウシーカー / Hadou Seeker) is the next MEGA Expansion Pack trademarked by The Pokemon Company on March 10, 2026, and it is expected to headline Mega Lucario Z — the very first “Z” Mega Evolution ever revealed, straight out of the Pokemon Legends: Z-A – Mega Dimension DLC. For international collectors who have been chasing every MEGA era release, this is one of the most anticipated sets of late 2026.

Here is why Aura Seeker matters: Lucario is one of the most iconic Pokemon in franchise history, and its Mega form has always been a top-tier collectible. With the addition of the brand-new Z Mega Evolution mechanic, Aura Seeker is positioned to introduce one of the most visually striking and lore-heavy chase cards of the entire Scarlet & Violet era. Japanese market trackers are already predicting MUR values above ¥70,000 before a single card has been officially revealed.

This guide compiles everything currently known about Aura Seeker as of April 2026 — trademark details, predicted chase cards, expected pull rates based on the MEGA series pattern, release window estimates, and what this set could mean for the Japanese Pokemon card market. Our team at Samurai Sword INC tracks Japanese set information daily from Tokyo, and we will update this guide as new cards are officially revealed.

Key Takeaway

Aura Seeker (Hadou Seeker) is the next MEGA Expansion Pack expected in late 2026 in Japan. The trademark was filed on March 10, 2026, and the set is projected to headline Mega Lucario Z — the first Z Mega Evolution revealed from the Pokemon Legends: Z-A Mega Dimension DLC. Predicted MUR values start at ¥70,000+. Full card reveals and the official release date are still to come — this guide covers everything known so far.

Why “Hadou Seeker” = “Aura Seeker”

The Japanese word “hadou” (波導) literally means “wave guide” and is the same term used in Lucario and the Mystery of Mew and the Pokemon anime for Lucario’s signature aura ability. That direct Lucario connection is why every major Japanese and English source is treating Mega Lucario Z as the confirmed headliner, even before any cards are shown.

Latest Update — Trademark & Leak Status (May 7, 2026)

Aura Seeker remains in the trademark + early-leak phase. No official card list, key visual, or release date has been announced yet. Here is everything credible as of today:

  • Trademark filing: “Hadou Seeker” (波導シーカー) was officially filed by Nintendo, Creatures, and Game Freak on March 10, 2026. Trademark-to-launch windows for prior MEGA Expansion Packs have averaged 6–9 months, pointing to a likely Q4 2026 (October–December) Japanese release.
  • Mega Lucario Z headliner — strong signal, not yet confirmed: The word hadou (波導 / “wave guide”) is the same Japanese term used in the Lucario and the Mystery of Mew film and the anime for Lucario’s signature aura ability. Every major leak aggregator (Card Chill, PokéBeach, japan-figure) treats Mega Lucario Z as the de-facto headliner.
  • TCG Pocket cross-reference: Pulsing Aura (B3) — a TCG Pocket expansion launching in 2026 — has already been fully revealed (234 cards) with Mega Lucario as its centerpiece. Pocket sets often share artwork with their physical TCG counterparts, so Pocket B3 is widely treated as a preview of Aura Seeker’s Mega Lucario Z artwork direction.
  • Predicted set size: Following the M5/M6 pattern, expect ~120–180 main cards plus secret rares, with a continued Mega Attack Rare (MA) tier.
  • English equivalent: No trademark filed yet. Expected early 2027.

Sources: J-PlatPat trademark database, PokéBeach (Mar 2026 trademark report), Card Chill leak roundups, japan-figure, premium.gamepedia.jp. Reliability: trademark confirmed, all card details are speculative. We will update this guide when official reveals begin.

¥6,000
Expected JPN BOX

Late 2026
Expected JPN Date

~¥70,000+
Top Card (Predicted)

30
Packs per Box

Set Overview: What Is Aura Seeker?

Aura Seeker (ハドウシーカー / Hadou Seeker) is expected to be the next mainline MEGA Expansion Pack in the Scarlet & Violet series. The name was officially trademarked by Nintendo, Creatures, and Game Freak on March 10, 2026, following the same trademark classification used for every previous Pokemon TCG set name. No official release date has been announced yet, but based on the typical 6–12 month window between trademark filing and launch, current community consensus points to a late 2026 Japanese release.

Spec Aura Seeker (Predicted) Storm Emeralda (M6)
Release Date (JPN) Late 2026 (Nov–Dec est.) July 31, 2026
Featured Card Mega Lucario Z Mega Rayquaza ex
MSRP (Pack) ¥200 (5 cards, est.) ¥200 (5 cards)
MSRP (Box) ¥6,000 (30 packs, est.) ¥6,000 (30 packs)
Theme Aura / Fighting / Steel Dragon / Sky / Storm
Game Tie-in Legends Z-A: Mega Dimension Legends Z-A: M-Dimension Rush
Est. Card Count 120–180 120–180
EN Release Early 2027 (est.) ~September 2026 (ME6)
Mega Lucario Z official artwork from Pokemon Legends Z-A showing aura-cloaked Z Mega Evolution form

Connection to Pokemon Legends: Z-A – Mega Dimension

The set name “Aura Seeker” directly references Lucario’s signature Aura Sphere move and its ability to sense living beings through aura. This is the exact theme driving the Mega Dimension DLC for Pokemon Legends: Z-A, where Mega Lucario Z — officially designated as the first Z Mega Evolution — was revealed as a brand-new discovered form. TCG sets historically sync with the biggest game reveals, and Aura Seeker is positioned to be Lucario’s moment just as Abyss Eye is for Darkrai.

The “Z” Mega Evolution Distinction

Mega Lucario Z is not just another alt-art version of the familiar Mega Lucario. It was classified as a new form of Mega Evolution based on how its form changes through exposure to a Mega Stone. The “Z” designation was created specifically to separate it from the previously known Mega Lucario. For collectors, this means Aura Seeker will contain a genuinely new card — not a reprint — with fresh artwork, mechanics, and lore.

Trademark Timeline

The Aura Seeker trademark was filed on March 10, 2026 by Nintendo, Creatures, and Game Freak — the standard three-company filing pattern for every Pokemon TCG set. For reference, trademarks in the MEGA series have typically preceded launch by 6–12 months:

  • Abyss Eye (M5): Trademark June 27, 2025 → Release May 22, 2026 (~11 months)
  • Storm Emeralda (M6): Trademark late 2025 → Release July 31, 2026 (~8 months)
  • Aura Seeker: Trademark March 10, 2026 → Expected late 2026 (~8–10 months)

Featured Card: Mega Lucario Z

Mega Lucario Z concept artwork, the first Z Mega Evolution and expected headliner of Pokemon TCG Aura Seeker Hadou Seeker set
Mega Lucario Z — The first “Z” Mega Evolution, the projected headliner of Aura Seeker (official artwork pending)

Mega Lucario Z is the expected centerpiece of Aura Seeker, and arguably the most anticipated Fighting-type Mega Evolution in Pokemon TCG history. Revealed in December 2025 as part of the Pokemon Legends: Z-A Mega Dimension DLC, it is the first Pokemon to ever receive a dedicated “Z” Mega Evolution designation — a brand-new classification separate from the existing Mega Lucario.

The Lore: Aura Manipulation & Steel-Energy Strikes

Mega Lucario Z surrounds its entire body with its aura, cloaking itself to increase defense, flexibility, and agility. Its design includes long fur growing around its head and waist, plus a distinctive fan-shaped tail that can visually disorient opponents in close combat. Most importantly, “areas of its body, such as the backs of its hands and its shins, have been hardened with steel energy” — enabling concentrated strikes that could translate into high-damage Fighting/Steel attacks on the TCG.

In the game, Z Mega Evolutions “need less time to fire off moves after receiving an order” but “burn through Mega Power very quickly, making them less suited for long battles.” If that mechanic carries over to the TCG, expect Mega Lucario Z to be a fast-aggro attacker with heavy damage output but a limited window — possibly a KO-two-Pokemon-and-discard mechanic similar to Mega Rayquaza’s hybrid designs.

Why Mega Lucario Z Matters

Lucario has one of the strongest collector pedigrees in the entire Pokemon TCG. Lucario & Melmetal GX from Unbroken Bonds is still a $100+ card in PSA 10. The original Mega Lucario EX from XY: Furious Fists remains a favorite among Fighting-type collectors. The current Mega Lucario ex SAR from MEGA Brave (M1) already commands ¥20,000–30,000 on Japanese secondary markets — and that is the “older” Mega form, not the new Z variant.

Given the rarity pattern of previous MEGA Expansion Packs, expect Mega Lucario Z to appear in multiple rarity tiers:

Rarity Predicted Price (JPN) Pull Rate Estimate
MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) ¥70,000–100,000+ ~1 per 45 boxes
SAR (Special Art Rare) ¥30,000–45,000 ~1 per 6 boxes
RR (Double Rare) ¥800–2,000 ~1 per 3–4 boxes
Mega Lucario Z high resolution artwork showing the first Z Mega Evolution with enhanced aura powers
Lucario’s TCG Track Record

Every major Lucario card release has held strong secondary market value. Lucario & Melmetal GX (2019): $100+ PSA 10. Mega Lucario EX from MEGA Brave (2025): ¥20,000–30,000 SAR. Zeraora-GX tag partners consistently appreciated. The Z Mega Evolution designation positions Mega Lucario Z to be the premium entry in this lineage.

Expected Mechanics (Prediction)

Based on the Mega Dimension DLC gameplay — where Z Mega Lucario fires off moves faster but exhausts Mega Power quickly — expect the TCG version to feature a rush/aggressive attacker design. Previous Lucario cards have emphasized fast setups (Aura Sphere, Power Cyclone), and the Z variant is likely to push this further with increased damage output at a resource cost. Japanese speculation threads suggest a 230–260 HP range with an attack dealing 220+ damage but discarding energy.

Predicted Chase Cards & Prices

Predictions compiled from Japanese market trackers (SNKRDUNK, Toreca Map, Altema, Card Chill speculation threads) and community analysis as of April 2026. Actual cards and values will change when official reveals begin. We will update this section as cards are confirmed.

Rank Predicted Card Rarity Predicted Price (JPN)
1 Mega Lucario Z MUR ¥70,000–100,000+
2 Mega Lucario Z SAR ¥30,000–45,000
3 Korrina (Corni) SAR ~¥18,000–25,000
4 Mega Gardevoir ex SAR ~¥15,000–20,000
5 Mega Garchomp ex SAR ~¥12,000–18,000
6 AZ SAR ~¥10,000–14,000
7 Mega Mawile ex SAR ~¥8,000–12,000
8 Zygarde ex SAR ~¥6,000–10,000

Why Korrina (Corni) Is the Lock Trainer SAR

Korrina (Japanese: コルニ / Corni) is the most obvious trainer SAR pick for Aura Seeker. She is the Shalour City Gym Leader in Pokemon X & Y, known as the “Successor of Mega Evolution,” and her ace Pokemon is Lucario. In the Legends: Z-A – Mega Dimension DLC, Korrina returns as a central character who helps the player discover Z Mega Evolution. A Korrina SAR in Aura Seeker would be one of the most storyline-appropriate trainer SARs in the entire MEGA era.

Other Mega Evolutions to Watch

Based on the Mega Dimension DLC roster and Japanese community speculation, these additional Mega Evolutions are likely candidates for inclusion:

  • Mega Gardevoir ex — Psychic/Fairy, a fan favorite since XY, strong secondary market demand
  • Mega Garchomp ex — Dragon/Ground, one of the most requested Mega returns
  • Mega Mawile ex — Steel/Fairy, tactical chase card with niche collector appeal
  • Mega Audino ex — Normal/Fairy, rumored inclusion from the DLC storyline
Collector Insight

Trainer SARs (full-art supporter cards) have been sleeper hits in previous MEGA sets. In M3 Munikis Zero, Emma SAR appreciated 40% within 3 months. Korrina has not had a full-art trainer SAR since Sword & Shield era, making her return in Aura Seeker a genuine catalyst card to watch.

New Steel-Type Special Energy (Speculation)

Multiple Japanese speculation threads reference a rumored new Steel-type special energy card that could support Mega Lucario Z’s Fighting/Steel dual typing. If confirmed, this would be a significant competitive card that also carries collector value — special energy cards with unique full-art treatments have been surprise hits in recent sets (Lightning Energy SP from S11A is still ¥4,000+).

Expected Pull Rates

Pull rate estimates are based on the MEGA Expansion Pack pattern established by M1–M6. The Pokemon Company does not officially publish pull rates. Actual rates for Aura Seeker may differ.

Per-Box Expected Pulls (30 packs)

Rarity Expected per Box Odds (per pack)
MUR ~0.02 (1 per 45 boxes) ~1 in 1,370
SAR (any) ~0.29 (roughly 1 per 3.4 boxes) ~1 in 103
SR (Pokemon/Supporter) ~0.76
SR (Item/Stadium) ~1.0 (near-guaranteed)
AR ~3 ~1 in 10
RR ~4 ~1 in 7.5

How MEGA Set Pull Rates Compare

The MEGA Expansion Pack structure differs from standard expansions. The key distinction: MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) cards are extraordinarily rare — roughly 1 per 45 boxes, or about 1 per 1,370 packs. This ultra-scarcity is what drives MUR values to ¥70,000+ territory for headliner cards.

SAR pull rates in MEGA sets have been slightly more generous than standard expansions — approximately 1 SAR per 3.4 boxes versus 1 per 5–6 boxes in regular sets. However, with multiple SAR types in the set, the odds of pulling a specific SAR (like Mega Lucario Z) remain low: roughly 1 in 20+ boxes for any individual SAR card.

Important

These pull rates are estimates based on previous MEGA Expansion Packs (M1–M6). Aura Seeker’s actual rates may differ. The Pokemon Company does not officially confirm pull rates for any set.

Should You Buy This Set?

With an expected ¥6,000 MSRP and strong chase card potential, here is how different collector profiles might want to approach Aura Seeker once it becomes available.

For Collectors (Experience-First Buyers)

If you collect Japanese Pokemon cards for the art and the opening experience, Aura Seeker looks like a strong candidate. The Fighting/Steel aesthetic with Mega Lucario Z as the centerpiece promises some of the most dynamic artwork in the MEGA era. Securing boxes at or near MSRP (¥6,000) would be the best price point — secondary market prices for popular Lucario-themed sets typically spike early and stabilize within 2–4 weeks.

Collector verdict: Keep this set on your radar. A Lucario-themed MEGA set with potential Korrina SAR and other returning Mega Evolutions could deliver one of the best opening experiences in the entire era.

For Investors & Resellers

The ¥6,000 MSRP creates a higher floor price, which could support stronger secondary market pricing. Mega Lucario Z’s cross-media appeal (Legends Z-A Mega Dimension DLC tie-in) adds demand beyond the TCG collector base. Key risk: the late-2026 release window overlaps with the 30th Celebration set (September 2026), which could split collector budgets.

Pre-Order Early

  • Secure boxes at or near MSRP before launch markups
  • Day 1 access for resale/grading opportunities
  • Lucario demand is historically strong and consistent
  • Risk: if set underperforms, MSRP is your floor

Wait and See

  • See actual card reveals before committing
  • Post-launch price data available within 1 week
  • Potential for early supply surplus (price dip)
  • Risk: if Mega Lucario Z MUR hits big, boxes sell out fast

JPN vs. English: Which Version?

The English equivalent would arrive approximately 2–4 months later in early 2027. Japanese versions have historically carried a 15–40% premium over English equivalents for SAR and MUR cards. For collectors who specifically want Japanese art quality and first-to-market access, the JPN version is typically the preferred choice. For budget-conscious buyers, the English version tends to offer similar cards at lower prices — though Lucario is a universally popular Pokemon, so expect strong demand on both versions.

Price Predictions & Box EV

All predictions are based on previous MEGA Expansion Pack patterns (M1–M6) and Japanese market tracker estimates (Altema, Toreca Map, SNKRDUNK community). Actual prices will differ. As of April 2026 — pre-release speculation.

Predicted Box EV Breakdown

Slot Expected per Box Predicted Avg Value Expected Value
High-rarity (SAR/MUR/SR) ~1 pull ~¥6,000–9,000 avg ~¥6,000–9,000
AR cards ~3 pulls ~¥800–1,200 avg ~¥2,400–3,600
RR cards ~4 pulls ~¥300–500 avg ~¥1,200–2,000
R / C / U ~22 pulls ~¥50 avg ~¥1,100
Total Expected Value ~¥10,700–15,700
BOX MSRP (Expected) ¥6,000

At the expected MSRP (¥6,000), the predicted box EV is potentially positive in the early weeks — driven by inflated Day 1 prices on chase cards. This is typical for MEGA sets; box EV tends to normalize to slightly negative within 4–6 weeks as supply enters the market. The key variable: how high Mega Lucario Z MUR and SAR prices actually reach at launch.

Secondary Market Box Price Trajectory (Predicted)

Aura Seeker predicted box price trajectory chart showing expected MSRP 6000 yen, Day 1 premium, and stabilization timeline through 2027
Predicted Aura Seeker box price trajectory — based on M1–M6 MEGA set patterns
Timeline Predicted Box Price Driver
Pre-release (Q2–Q3 2026) ¥6,500–8,000 Pre-order markups from secondary sellers
Day 1–3 (Launch) ¥9,000–13,000 Initial scarcity + Lucario hype
Week 2–4 ¥7,500–9,500 First restock wave; early opening data
Month 2–3 ¥6,500–8,500 Supply normalization
Month 6+ (Post-EN release) ¥6,000–7,500 Stable collector demand; depends on reprint cycle
MEGA Set Pattern

Previous MEGA Expansion Packs (M1–M6) saw Day 1 box prices 30–100% above MSRP, followed by gradual normalization over 4–8 weeks. Sets with universally popular headliners (like MEGA Brave with Mega Lucario ex) maintained premiums longest. Mega Lucario Z’s first-ever “Z” designation suggests Aura Seeker will follow a similar strong-demand pattern.

How to Buy Japanese Pokemon Cards

Japanese Pokemon booster boxes are region-locked at retail — you cannot simply order from the Pokemon Center Online unless you have a Japanese address. Here is how international collectors typically get access to new Japanese sets.

Japanese Retail (Lottery System)

Major Japanese retailers use a lottery (抽選) system for popular set releases:

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

Winning a retail lottery is typically the only way to secure MSRP pricing. Most international buyers cannot access these lotteries directly.

International Options

Samurai Sword INC ships authentic Japanese Pokemon products directly from Tokyo to the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and beyond. Every box is verified authentic (seal and shrink wrap inspection), shipped with tracked international delivery, and packed to prevent transit damage.

Coming Soon
Aura Seeker Booster Box (JPN)
Expected MSRP ¥6,000 (~$40) + shipping
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked international delivery

Browse Our Collection →

Key Dates to Watch

Date Event
December 2025 Mega Lucario Z revealed in Legends Z-A DLC
March 10, 2026 Aura Seeker trademark filed (Nintendo / Creatures / Game Freak)
Q3 2026 First card reveals expected
Late 2026 (Nov–Dec est.) Expected Japan availability
Early 2027 Expected English availability

Frequently Asked Questions

When is Aura Seeker (Hadou Seeker) expected to release?

Aura Seeker (ハドウシーカー / Hadou Seeker) is expected to release in late 2026 in Japan based on the standard 8–11 month window between trademark filing and launch. The trademark was filed on March 10, 2026 by Nintendo, Creatures, and Game Freak. The English equivalent is anticipated in early 2027. No official release date has been confirmed yet.

What does “Hadou” mean, and why does it point to Lucario?

“Hadou” (波導) is the Japanese word used in Lucario and the Mystery of Mew and the Pokemon anime for Lucario’s signature “aura” ability. It literally translates to “wave guide.” Because this term is so uniquely tied to Lucario, the community consensus is that Aura Seeker will headline Mega Lucario Z — the first Z Mega Evolution revealed in the Pokemon Legends: Z-A Mega Dimension DLC.

What is Mega Lucario Z, and how is it different from regular Mega Lucario?

Mega Lucario Z is the first ever “Z” Mega Evolution, revealed in December 2025 as part of the Pokemon Legends: Z-A Mega Dimension DLC. It was classified as a new form of Mega Evolution based on how its form changes through exposure to a Mega Stone. Compared to regular Mega Lucario, it has long fur around its head and waist, a fan-shaped tail, and areas of its body hardened with steel energy. In-game, Z Mega Evolutions fire moves faster but burn through Mega Power more quickly.

How much will an Aura Seeker booster box cost?

The expected Japanese booster box MSRP is ¥6,000 (approximately $40 at current exchange rates) for 30 packs of 5 cards each. This follows the price increase introduced by Abyss Eye (M5) in May 2026. Secondary market prices tend to be higher than MSRP for popular sets — expect ¥8,000–13,000 per box on Day 1 based on previous MEGA set patterns.

What are the predicted pull rates for Aura Seeker?

Based on the MEGA Expansion Pack pattern (M1–M6): MUR cards appear at roughly 1 per 45 boxes (~1 in 1,370 packs). SAR cards appear at roughly 1 per 3.4 boxes. Each box guarantees approximately 3 AR cards and 4 RR cards. The Pokemon Company does not officially publish pull rates — all figures are community estimates.

What is the most valuable card expected in Aura Seeker?

The predicted most valuable card is the Mega Lucario Z MUR (Mega Ultra Rare), with Japanese market trackers estimating ¥70,000–100,000+ based on patterns from previous MEGA sets and Lucario’s strong collector pedigree. The Mega Lucario Z SAR is predicted at ¥30,000–45,000. Korrina SAR is expected to be a secondary chase card at ¥18,000–25,000. These are pre-release estimates.

How can I buy Aura Seeker from outside Japan?

Japanese booster boxes are region-locked at retail. International buyers typically purchase through Japanese card exporters like Samurai Sword INC, which ships directly from Tokyo with tracked international delivery. Availability for new sets usually opens closer to the launch date. Amazon Japan and Rakuten also ship internationally on some listings, though availability varies significantly.


Abyss Eye (M5) 完整指南:Mega Darkrai ex、热门追卡 和 预订信息 [2026]

Abyss Eye (アビスアイ) is officially confirmed as the next MEGA Expansion Pack, releasing May 22, 2026 in Japan — headlined by Mega Darkrai ex, one of the most anticipated Mega Evolutions in the entire Scarlet & Violet era. The official key visual, pack artwork, and first card reveals were published on pokemon-card.com on April 20, 2026.

Confirmed on launch day is a Dark-type centered lineup: Mega Darkrai ex, Malamar (カラマネロ), Dark Bell, Chi-Yu (イーユイ), Zarude, and a brand-new special energy card — Shadow Dark Energy (シャドー悪エネルギー). The official pack MSRP is confirmed at ¥200 (tax included) per 5-card pack. Box-level configuration and full card list are still to be announced.

This guide has been updated to reflect the April 20, 2026 official reveal. Our team at Samurai Sword INC tracks every Japanese set announcement from Tokyo and ships sealed product to collectors worldwide — we’ll keep updating this page as each new card is revealed.

Key Takeaway (Updated Apr 20, 2026)

Abyss Eye (M5) is officially confirmed for May 22, 2026 in Japan. Pack MSRP is confirmed at ¥200 per 5-card pack. The headliner is Mega Darkrai ex, with confirmed Dark-type support from Malamar, Dark Bell, Chi-Yu, Zarude, and the new Shadow Dark Energy. Full card list and box configuration are still to be revealed.

Latest Update — Confirmed Details (May 7, 2026)

With Abyss Eye officially launching May 22, 2026 in Japan (15 days from this update), the full set has been progressively revealed. Here are the confirmed specifics from the official April 20 reveal and subsequent partial card list drops:

  • Set size: 81 cards in the main set, plus an estimated 35–40 secret rares (~120 total) — matching the structure of Nullifying Zero and Ninja Spinner.
  • Mega Darkrai ex profile: Darkness-type Basic, 280 HP. Two attacks confirmed — Night Raid [DD] 110+ (additional 110 damage if any of your Benched Pokémon have damage counters) and Abyss Eye [DDD] which instantly Knocks Out the opponent’s Active Pokémon if it is affected by any Special 状态.
  • New mechanics confirmed: Shadow Dark Energy (new energy type) and Dark Bell (new Item card) form the core synergy package for the Mega Darkrai archetype.
  • Confirmed support cards: Inkay, Malamar, Zarude, Chi-Yu, and Mega Excadrill ex round out the Darkness-type lineup.
  • English equivalent: “Pitch Black” — likely a near 1:1 mirror of Abyss Eye, projected for July 2026 (~2 month delay per series pattern).

Sources: pokemon-card.com (official), PokéBeach, PokeGuardian, snkrdunk leak roundup. Reviewed May 7, 2026.

May 22
JPN Release Date

¥200
Pack MSRP (5 cards)

6
Cards Revealed

M5
Set Code

Set Overview: What Is Abyss Eye?

Abyss Eye (アビスアイ) is the fifth MEGA Expansion Pack in the Scarlet & Violet series, designated M5, officially announced on pokemon-card.com on April 20, 2026. It is paired thematically with Storm Emeralda as the next MEGA cycle (Storm Emeralda’s confirmed release details are pending). Together, the MEGA Expansion Pack lineup has driven some of the highest collector demand in recent Pokemon TCG history.

Spec Abyss Eye (M5) — Confirmed
Release Date (JPN) May 22, 2026 (Friday)
Featured Card Mega Darkrai ex
Pack MSRP ¥200 tax included (5 cards per pack)
Box MSRP To be announced
Theme Dark / Abyss
Game Tie-in Pokemon Legends: Z-A
Revealed Cards (Day 1) Mega Darkrai ex, Malamar, Dark Bell, Chi-Yu, Zarude, Shadow Dark Energy
EN Release To be announced
Mega Darkrai Phase 2 cinematic scene from Pokemon Legends Z-A showing nightmare abyss form

Pack Price Confirmed at ¥200

The official product page lists ¥200 tax included per pack with 5 cards. This matches the pack pricing introduced with the MEGA Expansion Pack era. Box-level MSRP and pack count per box have not yet been announced on the official site — we’ll update this guide once confirmed.

Connection to Pokemon Legends: Z-A

The set name “Abyss Eye” references Darkrai’s signature ability to drag opponents into nightmares. The official key visual taglines — “闇の眼光、メガダークライex襲来” (The eyes of darkness — Mega Darkrai ex arrives) and “闇の力で戦局を支配せよ” (Dominate the battle with the power of darkness) — establish Dark-type energy acceleration as the set’s core competitive identity.

Featured Card: Mega Darkrai ex

Official Mega Darkrai ex card artwork from Pokemon TCG Abyss Eye M5, revealed April 20 2026
Mega Darkrai ex — Official card artwork revealed on pokemon-card.com (April 20, 2026)

Mega Darkrai ex is the confirmed centerpiece of Abyss Eye. The official reveal shows the Mega Evolution’s signature attack “Brain Crash” (ブレインクラッシュ) — when the opponent’s Active Pokemon is Confused, this attack deals 130 damage for just one Dark Energy. Paired with the new Shadow Dark Energy (also revealed in this set), the card sets up an efficient one-attachment knockout line.

Why Mega Darkrai ex Matters

Darkrai has a strong collector pedigree in the Pokemon TCG. The original Darkrai LV.X from Great Encounters (2008) still commands $300+ in PSA 10 condition. Darkrai EX from Dark Explorers (2012) was both a competitive powerhouse and a collector favorite. Darkrai VSTAR SAR from Dark Phantasma (2022) has consistently traded in the ¥8,000–12,000 range on SNKRDUNK.

The Mega Evolution treatment adds another dimension: MEGA cards in the current series have consistently commanded premium prices. Based on the pattern from previous MEGA Expansion Packs (M1–M4), expect Mega Darkrai ex to appear in multiple rarities in Abyss Eye:

Rarity Predicted Price (JPN) Pull Rate Estimate
MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) ¥49,000–70,000+ ~1 per 45 boxes
SAR (Special Art Rare) ¥21,000–30,000 ~1 per 6 boxes
RR (Double Rare) ¥500–1,500 ~1 per 3–4 boxes
Darkrai’s TCG Track Record

Every major Darkrai card release has held strong secondary market value. Darkrai LV.X (2008): $300+ PSA 10. Darkrai EX (2012): $150+ PSA 10. Darkrai VSTAR SAR (2022): ¥8,000–12,000. The Mega Evolution version is positioned to be the premium entry in this lineage.

Expected Mechanics

Based on the M-Dimension Rush DLC gameplay — where Darkrai inflicts sleep before dealing damage — expect Mega Darkrai ex to feature sleep-status synergy and Dark-type energy acceleration. Previous Darkrai cards have emphasized energy manipulation (Dark Pulse, Dark Cloak), and the MEGA version is likely to continue this pattern at a higher power level.

Mega Darkrai official artwork from Pokemon Legends Z-A Mega Dimension DLC

Confirmed Cards & Community Predictions

Officially Revealed Cards (April 20, 2026)

The official pokemon-card.com reveal confirmed 6 cards on launch day, with more announcements promised ahead of the May 22 release. Each card below pairs thematically with Mega Darkrai ex and the new Shadow Dark Energy to build a Dark-type energy-acceleration engine.

Malamar (Karamanero) official card from Abyss Eye M5
Malamar (カラマネロ) — Dark support
Dark Bell official card from Abyss Eye M5
Dark Bell (ダークベル) — Dark support
Chi-Yu (Ieyui) official card from Abyss Eye M5
Chi-Yu (イーユイ) — “Whirling Envy” 110 damage
Zarude official card from Abyss Eye M5
Zarude (ザルード) — “Shadow Whip” 170 damage
Shadow Dark Energy special energy card from Abyss Eye M5
Shadow Dark Energy (シャドー悪エネルギー) — New Special Energy

Card Type / Role Key Attack or Effect
Mega Darkrai ex Stage — Mega (Dark) “Brain Crash” — 130 damage for 1 Dark Energy if opponent is Confused
Malamar (カラマネロ) Stage 1 (Dark) Confusion-support partner for Mega Darkrai ex
Dark Bell (ダークベル) Dark Pokemon Dark-type support (full reveal pending)
Chi-Yu (イーユイ) Dark Pokemon “Whirling Envy” — 110 damage for 1 Dark Energy when target has 2+ damage counters
Zarude (ザルード) Dark Pokemon “Shadow Whip” — 170 damage if Shadow Dark Energy is attached to a Benched Pokemon
Shadow Dark Energy (シャドー悪エネルギー) Special Energy Enables Zarude’s 170 damage attack; central to the set’s energy engine
What This Tells Us

All 6 revealed cards are Dark-type or Dark-synergy. This is a focused, archetype-driven MEGA set — similar to how M4’s lineup was built around a single Mega Evolution’s game plan. Expect further reveals to include additional Dark Pokemon, supporter cards, and at least one new trainer item to round out the archetype.

Community Predictions (Unconfirmed)

The cards below have not been officially announced. They are community predictions compiled from Japanese trackers (Toreca Map, Altema, SNKRDUNK threads) as of April 2026. Treat them as speculation until pokemon-card.com confirms further reveals.

Predicted Card Rarity Why It’s Predicted
Mega Giratina ex SAR Thematic tie to “Abyss” via the Distortion World; strong collector demand for Giratina
Mega Gengar ex SAR Dark/Ghost aesthetic fit; long-established chase-card pedigree
Cyrus (Akagi) SAR Dark-type specialist; Team Galactic lore connection to Darkrai
Cynthia (Shirona) SAR Sinnoh region tie-in; perennial SAR demand

We’ll replace these predictions with confirmed cards as pokemon-card.com publishes further reveals. Historically, full card lists for MEGA expansion packs are announced 3–4 weeks before the street date — so expect the complete Abyss Eye list around late April to early May 2026.

Expected Pull Rates

Pull rate estimates are based on the MEGA Expansion Pack pattern established by M1–M4. The Pokemon Company does not officially publish pull rates. Actual rates for Abyss Eye may differ.

Per-Box Expected Pulls (30 packs)

Rarity Expected per Box Odds (per pack)
MUR ~0.02 (1 per 45 boxes) ~1 in 1,370
SAR (any) ~0.29 (roughly 1 per 3.4 boxes) ~1 in 103
SR (Pokemon/Supporter) ~0.76
SR (Item/Stadium) ~1.0 (near-guaranteed)
AR ~3 ~1 in 10
RR ~4 ~1 in 7.5

How MEGA Set Pull Rates Compare

The MEGA Expansion Pack structure differs from standard expansions. The key distinction: MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) cards are extraordinarily rare — roughly 1 per 45 boxes, or about 1 per 1,370 packs. This ultra-scarcity is what drives MUR values to ¥50,000+ territory.

SAR pull rates in MEGA sets have been slightly more generous than standard expansions — approximately 1 SAR per 3.4 boxes versus 1 per 5–6 boxes in regular sets. However, with more SAR types in the set, the odds of pulling a specific SAR (like Mega Darkrai ex) remain low: roughly 1 in 20+ boxes for any individual SAR card.

Important

These pull rates are estimates based on previous MEGA Expansion Packs (M1–M4). Abyss Eye’s actual rates may differ. The Pokemon Company does not officially confirm pull rates for any set.

Should You Buy This Set?

With pack MSRP confirmed at ¥200 and the first six cards officially revealed, here’s how different collector profiles might want to approach Abyss Eye.

For Collectors (Experience-First Buyers)

If you collect Japanese Pokemon cards for the art and the opening experience, Abyss Eye looks like a strong candidate. The Dark-type focused aesthetic with Mega Darkrai as the centerpiece, the reveal of a brand-new Shadow Dark Energy special energy, and thematic support from Malamar, Chi-Yu, and Zarude make this an archetype-first set. Pre-ordering at or near pack MSRP (¥200) or box-level MSRP once announced will give you the best price point — secondary market prices for popular MEGA sets typically spike on Day 1 and stabilize within 2–4 weeks.

Collector verdict: Add to your radar. The official reveals confirm a cohesive Dark-type theme that will likely carry across 120+ cards — a strong opening experience is highly likely.

For Investors & Resellers

The MEGA Expansion Pack series has consistently produced boxes that hold value above MSRP thanks to MUR scarcity (~1 per 45 boxes) and high-demand SAR headliners. Mega Darkrai’s cross-media appeal (Pokemon Legends: Z-A tie-in) adds demand beyond the TCG collector base. Key variables: the still-unannounced box MSRP and the strength of the full card list once revealed.

Buy Early

  • Secure boxes at or near MSRP before markup
  • Day 1 access for resale/grading opportunities
  • Darkrai + Giratina demand is historically strong
  • Risk: if set underperforms, MSRP is your floor

Wait and See

  • See actual card reveals before committing
  • Post-launch price data available within 1 week
  • Potential for early supply surplus (price dip)
  • Risk: if Darkrai MUR hits big, boxes sell out fast

JPN vs. English: Which Version?

The English equivalent (expected as ME5, ~July 2026) would arrive approximately 2 months later. Japanese versions have historically carried a 15–40% premium over English equivalents for SAR and MUR cards. For collectors who specifically want Japanese art quality and first-to-market access, the JPN version is typically the preferred choice. For budget-conscious buyers, the English version tends to offer similar cards at lower prices.

Price Predictions & Box EV

All predictions are based on previous MEGA Expansion Pack patterns and Japanese market tracker estimates (Altema, Toreca Map, SNKRDUNK community). Actual prices will differ. As of April 2026 — pre-release speculation.

Predicted Box EV Breakdown

Slot Expected per Box Predicted Avg Value Expected Value
High-rarity (SAR/MUR/SR) ~1 pull ~¥5,000–8,000 avg ~¥5,000–8,000
AR cards ~3 pulls ~¥800–1,200 avg ~¥2,400–3,600
RR cards ~4 pulls ~¥300–500 avg ~¥1,200–2,000
R / C / U ~22 pulls ~¥50 avg ~¥1,100
Total Expected Value ~¥9,700–14,700
BOX MSRP TBA (pack ¥200 confirmed)

Once the box MSRP is announced, the predicted box EV is potentially positive in the early weeks — driven by inflated Day 1 prices on chase cards. This is typical for MEGA sets; box EV tends to normalize to slightly negative within 4–6 weeks as supply enters the market. The key variable: how high Mega Darkrai ex MUR and SAR prices actually go at launch.

Secondary Market Box Price Trajectory (Predicted)

Abyss Eye predicted box price trajectory chart showing MSRP at 6000 yen, expected Day 1 premium, and stabilization timeline
Predicted Abyss Eye box price trajectory — based on M1–M4 MEGA set patterns
Timeline Predicted Box Price Driver
Pre-release (Now) Pre-orders opening soon Secondary sellers listing ahead of official box MSRP
Day 1–3 (May 22–24) Significant premium expected Initial scarcity + Mega Darkrai ex hype
Week 2–4 Gradual normalization First restock wave; early opening data
Month 2–3 Closer to MSRP band Supply normalization; additional card reveals priced in
Month 6+ Stable collector demand Depends on reprint cycle and EN release timing
MEGA Set Pattern

Previous MEGA Expansion Packs (M1–M4) saw Day 1 box prices 30–100% above MSRP, followed by gradual normalization over 4–8 weeks. Sets with strong headliners (like MEGA Dream ex with Mega Charizard X) maintained premiums longest. Mega Darkrai’s popularity suggests Abyss Eye will follow a similar strong-demand pattern.

How to Buy Japanese Pokemon Cards

Japanese Pokemon booster boxes are region-locked at retail — you can’t simply order from the Pokemon Center Online unless you have a Japanese address. Here’s how international collectors typically get access to new Japanese sets.

Japanese Retail (Lottery System)

Major Japanese retailers use a lottery (抽選) system for popular set releases:

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

Winning a retail lottery is typically the only way to secure MSRP pricing. Most international buyers can’t access these lotteries directly.

International Options

Samurai Sword INC ships authentic Japanese Pokemon products directly from Tokyo to the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and beyond. Every box is verified authentic (seal and shrink wrap inspection), shipped with tracked international delivery, and packed to prevent transit damage.

Pre-Order Opening Soon
Abyss Eye Booster Box (JPN)
Pack MSRP confirmed ¥200 · Box MSRP to be announced
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked international delivery

Browse Our Collection →

Key Dates to Watch

Date Event
April 20, 2026 Official reveal — Mega Darkrai ex + 5 support cards + Shadow Dark Energy
Late April – May 2026 Further card reveals expected from pokemon-card.com
May 22, 2026 (Fri) Official Japan release
TBA English release

Frequently Asked Questions

When is Abyss Eye released?

Abyss Eye (アビスアイ / M5) is officially confirmed for Friday, May 22, 2026 in Japan, as announced on the official pokemon-card.com product page on April 20, 2026. The English equivalent has not yet been announced.

How much is an Abyss Eye pack?

Pack MSRP is confirmed at ¥200 tax included for 5 cards per pack, per the official product page. Box-level MSRP and pack count per box have not yet been announced. Secondary market prices tend to be higher than MSRP for popular sets.

What cards have been confirmed in Abyss Eye?

As of April 20, 2026, the official site has confirmed six cards: Mega Darkrai ex (headliner, with the “Brain Crash” attack dealing 130 damage for 1 Dark Energy if the opponent is Confused), Malamar (カラマネロ), Dark Bell, Chi-Yu (“Whirling Envy” attack), Zarude (“Shadow Whip” 170 damage attack), and a new special energy card, Shadow Dark Energy (シャドー悪エネルギー). Further reveals are expected in the weeks before release.

What are the pull rates for Abyss Eye?

Based on the MEGA Expansion Pack pattern (M1–M4): MUR cards appear at roughly 1 per 45 boxes (~1 in 1,370 packs). SAR cards appear at roughly 1 per 3.4 boxes. Each box guarantees approximately 3 AR cards and 4 RR cards. The Pokemon Company does not officially publish pull rates — all figures are community estimates.

Is Abyss Eye connected to Pokemon Legends: Z-A?

Yes. The set is tied to Pokemon Legends: Z-A, with Mega Darkrai ex as the TCG headliner. The “Abyss Eye” name references Darkrai’s nightmare gaze concept — captured in the official Japanese tagline “闇の眼光、メガダークライex襲来” (The eyes of darkness — Mega Darkrai ex arrives). This cross-media connection has historically boosted collector demand for TCG cards.

How can I buy Abyss Eye from outside Japan?

Japanese booster boxes are region-locked at retail. International buyers typically purchase through Japanese card exporters like Samurai Sword INC, which ships directly from Tokyo with tracked international delivery. Availability for new sets usually opens closer to the launch date. Amazon Japan and Rakuten also ship internationally on some listings, though availability varies.


Inferno X 抽卡概率、最佳卡牌与盒子价值 (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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Mega Brave 抽卡概率、最佳卡牌与盒子价值 (M1L)

The Mega Lucario ex MUR — the first card in a brand-new gold rarity — has climbed past $340 on the JPN market. Lillie’s Determination SAR holds steady near $333. Seven months after release, Mega Brave remains the most talked-about set in the MEGA era.

Mega Brave (M1L) launched the MEGA series on August 1, 2025, bringing back Mega Evolution Pokemon and introducing the MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) rarity for the first time. Collectors in the US, UK, and Australia are still chasing these JPN-exclusive cards, and with the initial price surge now settled, the market has reached a more accessible range.

This guide covers the current JPN market prices from SNKRDUNK and Mercari, pull rates from opening data, a full box EV calculation, and a clear breakdown of who should buy this set and when. Our team at Samurai Sword INC ships over 100 Japanese booster boxes from Tokyo every week — here is what the data says about Mega Brave as of March 2026.

Key Takeaway

Mega Brave’s box EV gap is only -4.3% at current prices — one of the tightest in the MEGA series. Mega Lucario ex MUR ($347) and Lillie’s Determination SAR ($333) anchor the value, with a ~28% SAR pull rate per box.

~$63
Box Price

92
Cards

~28%
SAR Rate

30
Packs/Box

Mega Brave — Set Overview

Mega Brave is the first expansion pack in the MEGA series, marking a new chapter for the Pokemon TCG with Mega Evolution Pokemon and the debut of the MUR rarity.

Set Specs

Detail Info
Set Name Mega Brave (M1L) / メガブレイブ
Series MEGA Series (First Expansion)
Release Date (JPN) August 1, 2025
English Equivalent Mega Evolution — September 26, 2025
Total Cards 92 (63 base + 29 secret rares)
Packs per Box 30
Cards per Pack 5
MSRP ¥5,400 (~$36) / Market price: ~¥9,500 (~$63)
Key Rarities MUR (1), SAR (5), SR (11), AR (12)

Prices as of March 2026. Market prices based on SNKRDUNK data.

What Makes This Set Special

MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) debuted here. This gold-textured rarity applies a full gold foil treatment across the entire card — not just a gold border like previous UR cards. The Mega Lucario ex MUR features unique artwork distinct from its SAR counterpart, making it a standalone collectible rather than a simple recolor.

Lillie’s Determination is the set’s other headline. Lillie consistently commands premium prices across every set she appears in, and her SAR in Mega Brave has become one of the most expensive Supporter cards in recent memory. The card is also a competitive staple, driving demand from both collectors and players.

Five Mega Evolution Pokemon ex headline the set: Mega Lucario ex, Mega Venusaur ex, Mega Absol ex, Mega Mawile ex, and Mega Camerupt ex. Each appears in multiple rarities, giving collectors several tiers of chase cards to pursue.

Based on our daily handling of 100+ boxes, the print quality on Mega Brave is among the best in the MEGA series — the gold foil on MUR cards and the texture work on SARs stand out even compared to later sets like Inferno X and Ninja Spinner.

JPN vs English Release Timeline

Milestone JPN (Mega Brave M1L) ENG (Mega Evolution)
Release Date August 1, 2025 September 26, 2025
Set Composition Mega Brave only (92 cards) Mega Brave + Mega Symphonia combined
MUR Availability Yes (Mega Lucario ex) Equivalent as MHR
Price Premium 15-40% higher (historical) Base price
Current BOX Price ~$63 (¥9,500 SNKRDUNK) ~$95 (TCGPlayer)

JPN Mega Brave cards have traded at a 15-40% premium over their English Mega Evolution equivalents since launch, particularly for SAR and MUR/MHR rarities. The JPN printing quality — textured holofoil and sharper color saturation — continues to drive this gap.

Top 10 Most Valuable Cards in Mega Brave

The Mega Lucario ex MUR ($247) and Lillie’s Determination SAR ($320) lead a chase card lineup that has held value better than most MEGA series sets. Here are the 10 most valuable cards based on current JPN market data.

Top 3 most valuable Mega Brave cards: Mega Lucario ex MUR, Lillie's Determination SAR, Mega Venusaur ex SAR
Top 3 chase cards from Mega Brave
Rank Card Rarity JPN Price (¥) USD Est.
1 Mega Lucario ex MUR ¥52,000 ~$347
2 Lillie’s Determination SAR ¥50,000 ~$333
3 Mega Lucario ex SAR ¥12,000 ~$80
4 Lillie’s Determination SR ¥12,000 ~$80
5 Mega Venusaur ex SAR ¥8,500 ~$57
6 Mega Absol ex SAR ¥4,800 ~$32
7 Bulbasaur AR ¥1,600 ~$11
8 Mega Venusaur ex SR ¥1,400 ~$9
9 Mega Lucario ex SR ¥1,400 ~$9
10 Lt. Surge’s Deal SAR ¥1,000 ~$7

JPN prices: Mercari/SNKRDUNK averages as of March 2026. USD converted at approximately ¥150/USD.

#1 Mega Lucario ex — MUR (Mega Ultra Rare)

JPN Market: ~¥52,000 ($347)

Mega Lucario ex MUR 092/063 gold card from Pokemon Mega Brave set

The card that launched a new rarity. Mega Lucario ex MUR features a full gold-foil treatment with a unique illustration that differs entirely from the SAR version. The artwork depicts Mega Lucario in a dynamic fighting pose against a golden backdrop — a visual style that recalls the premium Black & White era UR cards.

With an estimated pull rate of roughly 1 in 50 boxes (about 1 in 1,500 packs), this is one of the hardest cards to pull in the modern era. The MUR launched at approximately ¥50,000 in August 2025, briefly dipped to around ¥37,000, and has since rebounded to approximately ¥52,000 as of March 2026. Lucario’s enduring popularity as a fan-favorite Fighting-type, combined with the novelty of the MUR rarity, continues to push demand higher.

From our experience shipping to US and UK customers, the JPN-sourced price ($347) offers better value than international marketplace premiums for collectors who buy through Japan-based exporters.

#2 Lillie’s Determination — SAR (Special Art Rare)

JPN Market: ~¥50,000 ($333)

Lillie's Determination SAR 091/063 from Pokemon Mega Brave set

Lillie is the most premium-commanding character in the Pokemon card market. Every set that features a Lillie card sees it climb to the top of the value charts, and Mega Brave follows that pattern exactly. The SAR illustration portrays Lillie in a determined pose with her signature white outfit — a full-art composition that has drawn comparisons to the beloved Lillie cards from the Sun & Moon era.

This card launched at roughly ¥70,000, corrected to the ¥38,000-40,000 range, and has since rebounded to approximately ¥50,000. The trajectory has been anything but linear — a renewed price surge in early 2026 confirmed strong collector demand. The card is also competitively playable as a strong draw-support Trainer, creating dual demand from collectors and tournament players.

For collectors, this is the set’s emotional centerpiece. Lillie SARs from previous sets (such as the VSTAR Universe variant) have appreciated over time, giving this card a solid track record as a long-term hold.

Mega Venusaur ex — SAR (Special Art Rare)

JPN Market: ~¥8,500 ($57)

The nostalgia factor carries real weight. Mega Venusaur ex SAR showcases the Generation 1 starter in a lush, garden-themed full-art illustration. As one of the original 151 Pokemon, Venusaur carries cross-generational appeal that keeps demand stable. At around $57, this is one of the most accessible premium chase cards and an attractive entry point for collectors who want a high-end card from the set without the four-figure commitment.

Cards #3–10

#3 Mega Lucario ex SAR (¥12,000 / ~$80) — The SAR features a distinct illustration from the MUR, showing Mega Lucario in a more action-oriented battle scene. A strong mid-range chase card that has gained value since launch.

#4 Lillie’s Determination SR (¥12,000 / ~$80) — The full-art SR version is the most expensive SR in years. Players who want Lillie’s powerful draw effect without paying SAR prices gravitate here.

#5 Mega Venusaur ex SAR (¥8,500 / ~$57) — Covered in detail above.

#6 Mega Absol ex SAR (¥4,800 / ~$32) — Absol’s dark aesthetic translates well to the SAR treatment. Popular among collectors of Dark-type Pokemon.

#7 Bulbasaur AR (¥1,600 / ~$11) — The highest-value AR in the set. Bulbasaur’s evergreen popularity makes this a fun bonus pull that has actually risen in price.

#8 Mega Venusaur ex SR (¥1,400 / ~$9) — The budget-friendly full-art Venusaur. Solid pickup for binder collectors.

#9 Mega Lucario ex SR (¥1,400 / ~$9) — The standard full-art version. A fraction of the MUR price but still a satisfying pull.

#10 Lt. Surge’s Deal SAR (¥1,000 / ~$7) — The most affordable SAR in the set. Lt. Surge’s polarizing design has kept prices low, which some collectors see as an opportunity.

For a comparison with other MEGA sets, check our MEGA Dream ex guide.

Should You Buy a Mega Brave Box?

At ~$63 per box, Mega Brave offers one of the strongest value propositions in the MEGA series — strong chase cards, guaranteed SR/AR pulls, and a market price well below launch peaks.

Collector Tip

At ~¥9,500 (~$63), Mega Brave boxes are 40-50% below their launch price of ¥12,000-15,000. Every box guarantees 2 SRs + 3 ARs, with a ~28% chance at a SAR.

For Collectors: A Strong Yes

Mega Brave delivers on two fronts that matter most to collectors: premium chase cards with stunning artwork, and a satisfying base of guaranteed rares.

Every box guarantees at least 2 SR cards, 3 AR cards, and 4-5 RR cards. That floor alone provides a solid binder-filling experience. The real excitement comes from the ~28% chance of pulling a SAR and the outside shot at the MUR.

The Lillie’s Determination cards (both SAR and SR) are the kind of centerpiece cards that define a collection. If you collect Lillie cards or Pokemon character art, Mega Brave is a must-open set.

For Players: Worth Considering

Lillie’s Determination is a strong competitive Supporter that sees play across multiple deck archetypes. Pulling one from a box is the most cost-effective way to add it to your deck, given that the SR alone runs $79 as a single.

Mega Lucario ex has niche competitive applications in Fighting-type builds, and Lt. Surge’s Deal offers utility in certain strategies.

For Investors: Time Your Entry

Mega Brave is in the post-correction stabilization phase — seven months after release, prices have settled from launch highs. Lillie’s Determination SAR has shown renewed upward momentum, suggesting the bottom may already be in for top-tier cards.

  • Reprint supply: Additional print runs would increase card supply. Monitor JPN restock announcements on SNKRDUNK.
  • ENG set equivalents: The English Mega Evolution set has already released. JPN cards maintain a premium, but the gap narrows over time.
  • Lillie track record: Lillie cards have consistently appreciated long-term. The SAR could be a hold candidate.
Factor Box Opening Singles Purchase
Cost Control Fixed per box (~$63) You choose exact cards
Chase Card Access Luck-dependent Guaranteed (at market price)
Guaranteed Floor 2 SR + 3 AR + 4 RR Only what you buy
Upside Potential MUR/SAR pull = big win No surprises
Opening Experience Priceless

Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

The typical Mega Brave box returns roughly ¥9,100 in card value against a ~¥9,500 market price — a -4.3% gap that is remarkably tight for a standard expansion.

EV Snapshot

Box EV: ~¥9,100 (~$61) | Box Price: ~¥9,500 (~$63) | Gap: -4.3%. Most standard expansions show a -20% to -40% gap at this stage.

SR and AR guaranteed slots provide a solid value floor in every box. The variable SAR and MUR slots are where the upside lives.

Pull Rates by Rarity

Rarity Estimated Rate (per BOX) Cards in Set
MUR ~1 in 50 boxes (~2%) 1
SAR ~1 in 3.6 boxes (~28%) 5
SR (Pokemon/Supporter) ~1 in 9 boxes per card (~11%) 6
SR (Trainer/Item) 1 per box (100%) 5
AR 3 per box (100%) 12
RR 4-5 per box (100%) ~15

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

Mega Brave pull rate visualization showing MUR, SAR, SR, AR, and RR rates per box
Pull rate estimates per box — Mega Brave (M1L)

Box EV Calculation

Component Avg. Value Pull Rate (/BOX) EV Contribution
MUR (Mega Lucario ex) ¥52,000 0.02 ¥1,040
SAR (5 types, avg) ¥15,260 0.28 ¥4,273
SR Pokemon/Supporter ¥3,000 0.11 ¥330
SR Trainer (guaranteed) ¥800 1.0 ¥800
AR (3 guaranteed) ¥550 3.0 ¥1,650
RR (4 guaranteed) ¥200 4.0 ¥800
Bulk (R, U, C) ~¥200
Total Box EV ~¥9,093
Box Market Price ~¥9,500
EV Gap -¥407 (-4.3%)

EV calculation as of March 2026. Based on Mercari/SNKRDUNK average prices.

Mega Brave box EV breakdown chart showing value contribution by rarity
Box EV breakdown by rarity — Mega Brave (M1L)

What the Variance Looks Like

Most boxes return ¥2,000-4,000 in card value from the guaranteed SR + AR + RR slots. But roughly 1 in 4 boxes hits a SAR, and if that SAR is Lillie’s Determination, a single pull covers 5+ box costs. The MUR is an outside shot at 1 in 50 boxes — but at ¥52,000, it pays for over 5 boxes on its own.

Three factors keep Mega Brave’s EV strong:

  1. Lillie’s Determination SAR (¥50,000) and Mega Lucario ex MUR (¥52,000) pull the top-end averages significantly upward.
  2. The guaranteed Trainer SR plus the chance at Pokemon/Supporter SRs provides a reliable baseline.
  3. AR quality: 3 guaranteed per box with an average around ¥500 contributes more than in most sets.

Where to Buy Japanese Mega Brave Boxes

Mega Brave booster boxes are available through several channels for international buyers.

From Japan-based export shops (like Samurai Sword INC): Direct access to JPN market pricing, authentic shrink-wrapped boxes, and tracked international shipping from Tokyo. Based on our experience shipping to 30+ countries, this is the most reliable route for sealed JPN product. We serial-track every box — if a resealed or searched box is ever reported, we identify the supplier and permanently remove them from our sourcing chain.

What to expect with shipping:

  • Delivery to US/CA: 7-14 business days (tracked)
  • Delivery to UK/AU: 10-18 business days (tracked)
  • Import duties vary by country — check your local customs thresholds

Authenticity check: Look for intact original shrink wrap and the M1L set code printed on the box. JPN Mega Brave boxes contain 30 packs of 5 cards each.

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.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Mega Brave?

Each Mega Brave box (30 packs) guarantees 1 Trainer SR, 3 Art Rares, and 4-5 Double Rares. The chance of pulling a Special Art Rare (SAR) from a single box is approximately 28%. The Mega Ultra Rare (MUR) Mega Lucario ex appears in roughly 1 out of every 50 boxes, or about a 2% chance per box. These are community-estimated rates, not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

What is the most expensive card in Mega Brave?

As of March 2026, the Mega Lucario ex MUR (092/063) leads at approximately ¥52,000 (~$347) on the JPN market. Lillie’s Determination SAR (091/063) follows closely at approximately ¥50,000 (~$333). Both cards have rebounded from post-launch lows and show strong collector demand.

Is a Mega Brave box worth buying?

At the current market price of approximately ¥9,500 (~$63), Mega Brave offers a narrow EV gap of about -4.3%, which is strong for a standard expansion. Every box guarantees SR and AR pulls, and you have a roughly 1-in-4 chance at a SAR worth $7-$333. For collectors who enjoy the opening experience and appreciate Mega Evolution artwork, Mega Brave is one of the better options in the current MEGA series.

What is MUR rarity in Pokemon cards?

MUR stands for Mega Ultra Rare, a new rarity introduced with the MEGA series starting from Mega Brave. MUR cards feature a full gold-foil treatment across the entire card surface with unique artwork different from other versions of the same Pokemon. The pull rate is approximately 1 in 50 boxes. The English equivalent rarity is called MHR (Mega Hyper Rare).

When did Mega Brave release in English?

The English equivalent of Mega Brave is part of the “Mega Evolution” set, which released on September 26, 2025. The English set combines cards from both JPN Mega Brave (M1L) and Mega Symphonia (M1S) into a single larger set. JPN-exclusive artwork and the original printing quality are only available in the Japanese version.

How does Mega Brave compare to other MEGA series sets?

Mega Brave was the first MEGA series expansion, alongside Mega Symphonia. Subsequent sets include MEGA Dream ex (High Class Pack), Inferno X (M3), and Ninja Spinner (M4). As the inaugural set, Mega Brave introduced the MUR rarity and set the template for the series. Its Lillie’s Determination SAR remains one of the highest-value Supporter cards across all MEGA sets.


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Mega Symphonia 抽卡概率、最佳卡牌与盒子价值 (M1S)

The Mega Symphonia pull rates and best cards data tells a clear story eight months after release: this set delivers one of the most exciting chase experiences in the modern Pokemon TCG.

Mega Gardevoir ex in full gold foil. A brand-new rarity tier that nobody saw coming. And a pull rate so low that most collectors will never see one in person. Mega Symphonia (M1S) dropped in Japan on August 1, 2025, and shook up the collecting scene by introducing the MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) — a gold-foiled, original-artwork card sitting above every other rarity in the set.

This guide breaks down every number that matters: actual pull rates from hundreds of box openings, the top 10 most valuable cards with current JPN and USD prices, a full box value calculation, and price trends through March 2026. Our team ships Mega Symphonia boxes from Tokyo every week — this is the same data we use to track the market ourselves.

Key Takeaway

Mega Gardevoir ex MUR — the first-ever Mega Ultra Rare — trades at ~¥52,000 ($358) with a pull rate of approximately 1 in 55 boxes. At ~¥8,000 ($55) per box with guaranteed 2 SRs and 3 ARs, Mega Symphonia offers one of the most accessible entry points in the current MEGA era lineup.

¥8,000
Box Price (JPN)

¥52,000
MUR Chase Card

~1 in 55
MUR Pull Rate

65%
Box EV Ratio

What Is Mega Symphonia? — Set Overview

Mega Symphonia launched on August 1, 2025 as the first expansion pack from the Pokemon Card Game MEGA era, alongside its twin set Mega Brave. The set marks the return of Mega Evolution to the TCG — and it introduced a brand-new rarity that collectors had never seen before.

Set Specs & Key Features

Specification Details
Set Name Mega Symphonia (M1S)
Series Pokemon Card Game MEGA
Release Date (JPN) August 1, 2025
Release Date (ENG) September 26, 2025 (as “Mega Evolution”)
Total Cards 92 (63 regular + 29 secret rares)
Cards per Pack 5
Packs per Box 30
MSRP ¥180/pack
Market Price (Box) ~¥8,000 (~$55 at ¥145/USD)
Mega Pokemon 5 (Gardevoir, Latias, Kangaskhan, Manectric, Abomasnow)

Prices as of March 2026. Market prices via SNKRDUNK.

Mega Symphonia M1S sealed booster box with shrink wrap
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-eab61d9c7c10/mega_symphonia_box-master.webp

What Makes This Set Special — MUR & the Return of Mega Evolution

The headline feature is the MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) — a completely new rarity tier exclusive to the MEGA series. Unlike previous gold cards (UR), MUR cards feature entirely original artwork with a full gold-foil treatment across the entire card surface. The result is one of the most visually striking cards the Pokemon TCG has produced.

Mega Symphonia’s MUR is Mega Gardevoir ex (#092/063), and its combination of Gardevoir’s popularity, stunning artwork, and extreme rarity has made it the defining chase card of the MEGA era so far.

Beyond the MUR, the set brings five Mega Evolution Pokemon ex into the current format. These Mega Pokemon are worth three Prize cards when knocked out but deliver devastating attacks that can swing games. Mega Gardevoir ex has carved out a spot in competitive play, giving this set relevance for both collectors and players.

JPN vs English Release Timeline

Japan received Mega Symphonia nearly two months before the English-language set (branded “Mega Evolution”) launched on September 26, 2025. The English set combines cards from both Mega Brave and Mega Symphonia, meaning certain JPN-exclusive cards did not make it into the English release.

For collectors and investors, JPN versions of Mega Symphonia cards carry a 15-40% price premium over their English counterparts — a pattern consistent across previous sets and the MEGA era specifically. For a deeper look at why JPN cards command this premium, see our Japanese vs English Pokemon Cards comparison.

For a look at the other MEGA-era debut set, check out our MEGA Dream ex Pull Rates & Best Cards guide.

Top 10 Most Valuable Mega Symphonia Cards

Mega Symphonia’s value is concentrated at the top, with the MUR in a league of its own. Here is the full top 10 as of March 2026.

Rank Card Rarity JPN Price (¥) USD Est.
1 Mega Gardevoir ex MUR ¥52,000 $358
2 Mega Gardevoir ex SAR ¥15,500 $107
3 Acerola’s Prank SAR ¥7,800 $54
4 Mega Latias ex SAR ¥5,100 $35
5 Mega Kangaskhan ex SAR ¥4,400 $30
6 Acerola’s Prank SR ¥2,000 $14
7 Wally’s Compassion SAR ¥1,700 $12
8 Mega Gardevoir ex SR ¥950 $7
9 Mega Latias ex SR ¥750 $5
10 Mega Manectric ex SR ¥550 $4

Prices as of March 2026. JPN prices based on Altema buy/sell midpoint and Mercari completed transactions. USD estimates at ¥145/USD.

#1 — Mega Gardevoir ex (MUR) — ~¥52,000 / ~$358

Mega Gardevoir ex MUR gold foil card from Mega Symphonia M1S
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-860d6d5ca0fa/mega_gardevoir_ex_mur_8433b5b0-42c7-43fb-ac9b-15691a129487-master.webp

The crown jewel of Mega Symphonia and the first-ever MUR card in the Pokemon TCG. This card features a completely original illustration of Mega Gardevoir wrapped in shimmering gold foil — not a recolored version of the SR, but a unique piece of art created specifically for this rarity.

The price reflects its extreme scarcity: MUR appears in roughly 1 out of every 50-60 boxes opened, making it significantly rarer than a standard SAR. Gardevoir consistently ranks among the top 10 most popular Pokemon globally (9th place in the 2020 Pokemon of the Year vote), and that sustained collector demand keeps the floor high.

At ~¥52,000, the MUR has stabilized after launch-week highs of ¥80,000+. For PSA 10 graded copies, expect ¥100,000+ ($690+). Based on our daily handling of 100+ boxes across all MEGA-era sets, we see consistent demand for this card from international collectors.

#2 — Mega Gardevoir ex (SAR) — ~¥15,500 / ~$107

Mega Gardevoir ex SAR Special Art Rare card from Mega Symphonia
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-c28471a8fc45/mega_gardevoir_ex_sar_f492cfbd-e101-4a93-beeb-bce940d1998a-master.webp

The SAR version showcases a different full-art illustration of Mega Gardevoir in an ethereal, flowing composition. Gardevoir’s character popularity, the high-quality art direction, and the SAR’s texture combine to make this the second most valuable card in the set.

At ¥15,500, this sits firmly in the premium SAR tier. Roughly 1 SAR appears per 3-4 boxes, and pulling this specific card requires either luck or volume (about 5.7% chance per SAR pull).

#3 — Acerola’s Prank (SAR) — ~¥7,800 / ~$54

Acerola's Prank SAR Special Art Rare supporter card from Mega Symphonia
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-8cd62199009c/sar_texture_example_3ee9e8df-a26a-4972-b639-6958415454e0-master.webp

Acerola is one of the most beloved Trainer characters in the Pokemon franchise, sitting just behind Lillie in collector demand. Every high-rarity Acerola card across multiple sets has commanded strong prices, and Mega Symphonia’s SAR version follows that pattern.

The artwork depicts Acerola in her signature playful pose with Ghost-type Pokemon — a fan-favorite design that resonates with character collectors across both Japanese and international markets. As a Supporter card, it also sees play in competitive decks, adding demand beyond pure collecting.

Cards #4-10

#4 — Mega Latias ex (SAR) — ~¥5,100 / ~$35 The Eon Duo Pokemon in a stunning SAR treatment. Latias carries strong nostalgia factor from Ruby & Sapphire, and the artwork captures its graceful flying form.

#5 — Mega Kangaskhan ex (SAR) — ~¥4,400 / ~$30 The parent-and-child Mega Evolution in SAR form. The dynamic artwork showing both Kangaskhan and its baby during Mega Evolution has earned strong community appreciation.

#6 — Acerola’s Prank (SR) — ~¥2,000 / ~$14 The SR version of Acerola’s Prank. Character collectors who want the Acerola art at a more accessible price point pick up the SR as an alternative to the SAR.

#7 — Wally’s Compassion (SAR) — ~¥1,700 / ~$12 A Supporter SAR featuring Wally in an emotional composition. Lower demand compared to Acerola, but still a quality pull from any box.

#8 — Mega Gardevoir ex (SR) — ~¥950 / ~$7 Standard SR illustration of the set’s flagship Mega Pokemon. A solid entry point for Gardevoir fans who want a premium version without SAR/MUR pricing.

#9 — Mega Latias ex (SR) — ~¥750 / ~$5 The SR treatment of Mega Latias. Holds value above most regular rares thanks to Latias’s enduring popularity.

#10 — Mega Manectric ex (SR) — ~¥550 / ~$4 The Electric-type Mega Evolution SR. Competitively relevant in certain builds, keeping floor demand steady.

Mega Latias ex SAR Special Art Rare card from Mega Symphonia M1S
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-60cc3812536b/mega_latias_ex_sar-master.webp

Should You Buy a Mega Symphonia Box?

At ~¥8,000 (~$55) per box, Mega Symphonia sits at one of the most accessible price points in the current MEGA era lineup. Here is how the set stacks up for different buyers.

For Collectors — Strong Buy

Mega Symphonia is a collector’s set through and through. The MUR introduces a rarity tier unlike anything the Pokemon TCG has done before, and the SAR lineup features some of the strongest artwork in the MEGA era. Every box guarantees 2 SR pulls and 3 AR cards, so even boxes without a SAR deliver cards worth keeping.

The Mega Evolution theme taps into deep nostalgia. Mega Gardevoir, Mega Latias, and Mega Kangaskhan are fan favorites that carry emotional weight beyond their market value. Based on our daily handling of 100+ boxes, we consistently see collectors respond positively to this set’s pull structure — the guaranteed SR and AR slots give every box a satisfying result.

Your move: At ¥8,000, opening 1-2 boxes gives you a strong chance at meaningful SRs and ARs, with the thrill of a potential SAR or the ultra-rare MUR.

For Players — Selective Buy

Mega Gardevoir ex has established itself in the competitive metagame with high damage output (worth 3 Prize cards when knocked out). Mega Manectric ex and Mega Abomasnow ex also see niche play.

If you are building a Mega Gardevoir deck, purchasing singles may be more cost-effective — the RR version is available for under ¥500. Consider a box if you want both playable cards and collector pulls.

Your move: Buy singles for specific deck pieces. A box makes sense if you want playables plus the collection experience.

For Investors — Monitor Entry Points

Mega Symphonia has completed its initial price correction. The MUR has stabilized around ¥52,000 after settling from ¥80,000+ at launch. Based on past patterns, MUR/UR-tier cards from popular sets tend to appreciate once production ends.

Key factors to track: reprint announcements, competitive meta shifts, and the English set’s lifecycle. As the English Mega Evolution set matures, JPN premium may widen.

Your move: Track prices through SNKRDUNK for box investments. For singles, monitor Mercari for PSA 10-worthy raw cards at current rates.

JPN vs English — Which Version?

Factor Japanese (M1S) English (Mega Evolution)
Release Date August 1, 2025 September 26, 2025
MUR Card Mega Gardevoir ex (exclusive art) Same card, different print
Print Quality Higher texture, sharper foil Standard
Card Prices 15-40% premium over ENG Lower entry cost
Set Composition 92 cards (Symphonia only) Combined Brave + Symphonia
Collector Demand Growing international demand Larger player base

JPN versions trade at a consistent premium. If you collect for long-term value or appreciate higher print quality, JPN is the stronger choice. For tournament play at lower cost, the English set works fine.

For a detailed comparison of other MEGA-era sets, check our Best Japanese Pokemon Booster Box 2026 guide.

Mega Symphonia Pull Rates & What’s in Your Box

Every Mega Symphonia box contains 30 packs of 5 cards each (150 cards total). Here is what the data shows after aggregating hundreds of box openings from the Japanese community.

Pull Rates by Rarity

Rarity Cards in Set Per-Box Rate Approx. Odds
MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) 1 ~0.018/box ~1 in 55 boxes
SAR (Special Art Rare) 5 ~0.29/box ~1 in 3.5 boxes
SR (Super Rare) — Pokemon/Supporter 7 ~0.77/box ~1 in 1.3 boxes
SR (Super Rare) — Trainer Items 4 1.0/box 1 per box (guaranteed)
AR (Art Rare) 12 3.0/box 3 per box (guaranteed)
RR (Double Rare) 7 ~4.5/box 4-5 per box
R (Rare) 8 Variable Multiple per box

Estimated based on community opening data from 1,000+ boxes. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Mega Symphonia pull rates by rarity tier showing MUR SAR SR AR RR distribution
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-938e6f3e968d/chart_pull_rates_8dd7e0e6-60e6-462a-8957-eba8b75da775-master.webp

The guaranteed floor is solid: every single box gives you 1 Trainer SR, 3 ARs, and 4-5 RRs. The variable slot is the Pokemon/Supporter SR-or-higher, where roughly 77% of boxes yield at least one, and about 29% contain a SAR.

Box Value Breakdown

Using current March 2026 Mercari/Altema transaction prices:

Component Avg Value per Box Calculation
MUR chance ¥936 ¥52,000 × 0.018
SAR chance ¥2,030 avg SAR ¥7,000 × 0.29
SR (Pokemon/Supporter) ¥601 avg SR ¥780 × 0.77
SR (Trainer) guaranteed ¥350 avg Trainer SR ¥350 × 1.0
AR (3 guaranteed) ¥600 avg AR ¥200 × 3.0
RR (4-5 guaranteed) ¥450 avg RR ¥100 × 4.5
Bulk (R/U/C) ¥200 Estimated lot value
Total Box EV ~¥5,167
Box Market Price ~¥8,000
EV Ratio ~65%

A 65% EV ratio falls within the standard range for Pokemon TCG expansion packs, where ratios typically sit between 50-80%. The guaranteed SR and AR slots ensure every box delivers a baseline of collectible cards, while SAR and MUR pulls push individual boxes well above the average.

Understanding Variance — What Most Boxes Look Like

The EV above is an average across all boxes, including the rare ones with a MUR or SAR. Here is what a typical opening experience looks like:

Most common outcome (~70% of boxes): 1 Trainer SR + 3 AR + 4-5 RR. Total value: ~¥1,700. These boxes rely on the guaranteed slots for their base value — and the opening experience itself is part of what makes collecting enjoyable.

Good box (~25% of boxes): Everything above + 1 Pokemon/Supporter SR. Total value: ~¥3,500. A solid result that adds a meaningful card to your collection.

Great box (~5% of boxes): A SAR pull. Total value: ¥6,000-¥20,000+ depending on which SAR. Boxes with a top-tier SAR like Mega Gardevoir or Acerola cover their cost and then some.

Jackpot (~1.8% of boxes): The MUR. Total value: ¥52,000+.

Singles vs Box — Cost Comparison

Target Card Single Purchase Boxes Needed (Avg) Box Cost Better Option
Mega Gardevoir ex MUR ¥52,000 ~55 boxes ¥440,000 Singles
Mega Gardevoir ex SAR ¥15,500 ~17 boxes ¥136,000 Singles
Acerola’s Prank SAR ¥7,800 ~17 boxes ¥136,000 Singles
Any SAR ¥7,000 avg ~3.5 boxes ¥28,000 Consider boxes
Mega Gardevoir ex RR ¥400 <1 box ¥8,000 Singles
Opening experience Priceless 1 box ¥8,000 Box

If you are targeting a specific high-value card, singles are almost always more efficient. Boxes shine when you want the complete set experience — the thrill of pulling unknown cards, building a collection organically, and the chance at something extraordinary.

Where to Buy Mega Symphonia Boxes from Japan

Sourcing authentic Japanese Pokemon booster boxes requires a trusted seller with direct access to the JPN market. From our experience shipping to the US, Canada, UK, and Australia daily, here is what matters.

Buying from a Specialized JPN Card Shop

At Samurai Sword INC, we ship sealed Mega Symphonia booster boxes directly from Tokyo. Every box is shrink-wrapped, verified authentic, and serial-tracked — if any box fails our quality inspection, we trace it back to the source. Based on our daily handling of 100+ boxes across all current sets, the prices and data in this guide reflect what we see on the ground.

Mega Kangaskhan ex SAR Special Art Rare card from Mega Symphonia M1S
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-dd78d98e5556/mega_kangaskhan_ex_sar-master.webp

Shipping & Import Guide

Destination Shipping Time Estimated Shipping Import Duty
United States 7-14 days $12-18 Generally duty-free under $800
Canada 10-18 days $15-22 May apply over CAD $20
United Kingdom 10-18 days $15-22 VAT applies on total value
Australia 10-18 days $15-22 GST applies on imports over AUD $1,000

All orders include tracking. Every box is serial-tracked for authenticity verification.

The Bottom Line

Mega Symphonia earns its place as a landmark set in the Pokemon TCG. Three key takeaways:

  1. The MUR changes the game: Mega Gardevoir ex MUR at ~¥52,000 ($358) represents a new tier of chase card. Its 1-in-55-box rarity and stunning gold-foil artwork make it the defining card of the MEGA era.
  1. Stable prices signal opportunity: At ~¥8,000 per box, the initial premium has fully adjusted. You are buying at a stabilized market price — not chasing launch-week hype.
  1. JPN versions hold their premium: With 15-40% price premiums over English cards, Japanese Mega Symphonia continues to reward collectors who source from the original market.

For a look at all MEGA-era sets and how they compare, see our Best Japanese Pokemon Booster Box 2026 guide.

Wally's Compassion SAR Special Art Rare supporter card from Mega Symphonia M1S
https://samuraiswordtokyo.com/wp-content/uploads/samurai-media/2026/05/external-e6c04e08fbf2/wally_compassion_sar-master.webp
Featured Product
Mega Symphonia Booster Box (M1S)
¥7,200 (~$49)
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked · Serial-numbered

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Mega Symphonia?

Based on aggregated opening data from the Japanese community (1,000+ boxes), the estimated pull rates per box are: MUR approximately 1 in 55 boxes, SAR approximately 1 in 3.5 boxes, Pokemon/Supporter SR approximately 1 in 1.3 boxes. Every box guarantees 1 Trainer SR, 3 Art Rares, and 4-5 Double Rares. These rates are estimated from community data and not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

What is the most expensive card in Mega Symphonia?

Mega Gardevoir ex MUR (#092/063) is the most valuable card, trading at approximately ¥52,000 (~$358 USD) as of March 2026. The MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) features unique gold-foil artwork and appears in roughly 1 per 50-60 boxes opened.

What is a MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) card?

MUR stands for Mega Ultra Rare, a brand-new rarity tier introduced with the Pokemon Card Game MEGA series starting from Mega Brave and Mega Symphonia in August 2025. MUR cards feature completely original artwork with full gold-foil treatment across the entire card surface. Unlike previous gold cards (UR), the artwork is not a recolor but a unique illustration created for this rarity.

Is Mega Symphonia worth buying in 2026?

At current market prices of approximately ¥8,000 (~$55) per box, Mega Symphonia offers strong value for collectors. The set features the first-ever MUR card, popular SAR artwork featuring Gardevoir and Acerola, and guaranteed SR/AR pulls in every box. Box prices have stabilized from their launch-week premiums, making this an accessible entry point. Our team at Samurai Sword INC handles these boxes daily and sees consistent collector satisfaction with the pull structure.

How many packs are in a Mega Symphonia booster box?

A Mega Symphonia booster box contains 30 packs, each with 5 cards, for a total of 150 cards per box. The set has 92 different cards total (63 regular + 29 secret rares).

What is the difference between Mega Symphonia and Mega Brave?

Mega Symphonia and Mega Brave are twin expansion packs that launched together on August 1, 2025, as the first sets in the MEGA era. They share the same set structure but contain different Pokemon. Mega Symphonia features Mega Gardevoir, Mega Latias, Mega Kangaskhan, Mega Manectric, and Mega Abomasnow. Mega Brave features Mega Lucario, Mega Venusaur, Mega Metagross, Mega Salamence, and Mega Blaziken. Each set has its own MUR chase card.

When was Mega Symphonia released in English?

The English equivalent launched on September 26, 2025, under the name “Mega Evolution.” The English set combines cards from both Mega Brave and Mega Symphonia into a single release. Certain JPN-exclusive cards may not appear in the English version. JPN versions typically trade at a 15-40% premium over their English counterparts.



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Nihil Zero 抽卡概率、最佳卡牌与盒子价值 (M3)

One MUR card in every 50 boxes — those are the Nihil Zero pull rates that every collector needs to know before buying. That’s roughly a 2% chance per box of pulling the gold Mega Zygarde ex, the single most valuable card in Japan’s first MEGA-era expansion of 2026.

Nihil Zero (known internationally as “Nihil Zero” or “Nullifying Zero”) dropped in Japan on January 23, 2026, and it brought a brand-new rarity tier, four Mega Evolutions, and some of the most stunning SAR artwork in the MEGA era. Six weeks in, launch premiums have settled and several mid-tier cards are actually trending upward as competitive demand solidifies.

This guide covers the actual pull rates sourced from Japanese opening data, a full top-10 card ranking with real JPN market prices converted to USD, an expected value calculation for sealed boxes, and a clear answer on whether you should buy, hold, or go singles. We pulled the latest data from SNKRDUNK, Mercari, and eBay sold listings so you can make a decision based on numbers — not hype.

Our team tracks JPN card prices daily and ships 100+ boxes from Tokyo every week. This is the data we use internally, now available to you.

Key Takeaway

Mega Zygarde ex MUR trades at ¥35,000 (~$225) with a 1-in-50-box pull rate. Rosa’s Encouragement SAR is the fan-favorite at ¥21,000. At ~¥7,000 per box, Nihil Zero is the most affordable MEGA-era entry point — and the first J-Regulation set, giving it long-term “era starter” appeal.

~¥7,000
Box Price

118
Cards

~1/6
SAR Rate

30
Packs/Box

Nihil Zero (Nihil Zero) — Set Overview

Nihil Zero is the third expansion pack in the Pokemon TCG MEGA series and the first set under J-Regulation — Japan’s newest card legality format. The set revolves around Mega Evolutions tied to Pokemon Legends: Z-A, with Mega Zygarde ex as the flagship card.

Release Info, Price & Pack Contents

Detail Info
Set Name (JPN) ムニキスゼロ (Nihil Zero)
Set Code M3
Release Date (JPN) January 23, 2026
MSRP ¥5,400/box (¥180/pack)
Market Price ~¥7,000 (~$45 at ¥155/USD)
Packs per Box 30 packs × 5 cards
Set Size 80 main set + 38 secret rares (118 total)
Regulation J-Regulation (first set)

Prices as of March 2026. Market prices based on SNKRDUNK data.

What Makes This Set Special — Mega Evolution & J-Regulation

Nihil Zero introduces two firsts. It’s the debut of J-Regulation, meaning every card in this set will remain tournament-legal for the longest possible window. For players, that alone makes it worth attention.

For collectors, the real draw is the MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) rarity — a gold-finished, full-art treatment exclusive to the MEGA series. Only one MUR exists per set, and Nihil Zero’s MUR is Mega Zygarde ex, card 117/080. The gold etching across the entire card surface gives it a visual weight that photographs don’t fully capture.

The set also features four Mega Evolution ex cards: Mega Zygarde, Mega Starmie, Mega Clefable, and Mega Skarmory. Plus a competitively relevant Meowth ex with a Supporter-search ability that’s already seeing play in Japan.

JPN vs International Timeline

The English-language equivalent — Mega Evolution: Perfect Order — is scheduled for March 27, 2026, roughly two months after the Japanese release.

🇯🇵 Japanese Version

  • Released January 23, 2026
  • Set name: Nihil Zero (M3)
  • 2-month head start
  • Higher texture/foil quality

🌎 English Version

  • Releasing March 27, 2026
  • Set name: Perfect Order
  • Cards from multiple JPN sets
  • Lower secondary market price

Historically, JPN versions of the same cards trade at a 15–40% premium over their English counterparts. That premium tends to be strongest for SARs and MURs, where JPN texture and foil quality stand out most. For a comprehensive breakdown, see our Japanese vs English Pokemon Cards comparison.

Top 10 Most Valuable Cards in Nihil Zero

Here’s the full ranking based on Japanese secondary market data as of March 2026. USD estimates use the current rate of ¥155/USD.

Rank Card Rarity JPN Price (¥) USD Est.
1 Mega Zygarde ex MUR ¥35,000 ~$226
2 Rosa’s Encouragement SAR ¥21,000 ~$135
3 Meowth ex SAR ¥12,000 ~$77
4 Mega Starmie ex SAR ¥5,000 ~$32
5 Mega Zygarde ex SAR ¥3,500 ~$23
6 Mega Clefable ex SAR ¥2,800 ~$18
7 Rosa’s Encouragement SR ¥2,500 ~$16
8 Meowth ex SR ¥2,000 ~$13
9 Yukari SAR ¥1,800 ~$12
10 Poke Pad SR ¥1,100 ~$7

Prices based on SNKRDUNK and Mercari transaction data, March 2026.

#1 Mega Zygarde ex MUR — The Gold Grail

Mega Zygarde ex MUR gold Mega Ultra Rare card from Nihil Zero set

The gold Mega Zygarde ex launched at ¥60,000 (~$387) on day one and has settled around ¥35,000 (~$226) six weeks later. That correction aligns with the typical MUR trajectory, and the card remains the most expensive single in any 2026 Japanese set so far.

The price holds because of three factors. First, the MUR pull rate is brutal — roughly one in every 50 boxes. Second, Zygarde is the face of Pokemon Legends: Z-A, giving it narrative weight beyond typical chase cards. Third, the MUR treatment itself is stunning: full gold etching across the card surface with a tactile texture that sets it apart from standard SARs.

For context, the previous MUR — Mega Rayquaza ex from the M1 set — followed a similar trajectory: day-one spike, 30-40% correction over four weeks, then gradual stabilization. Zygarde is following that exact pattern, and the current price range around ¥35,000 appears to be approaching its stabilization floor.

#2 Rosa’s Encouragement SAR — Fan-Favorite Trainer Art

Rosa's Encouragement SAR Special Art Rare trainer card from Nihil Zero

Rosa (Mei in Japanese) is the female protagonist from Pokemon Black 2 and White 2, and she commands serious collector demand. This SAR features her eating a Pikachu-shaped double-scoop ice cream cone — a charming, lighthearted illustration that’s driven strong emotional response from collectors in Japan.

Day-one price: ¥40,000 (~$258). Current: ¥21,000 (~$135). The 48% correction from day one reflects SAR pull rates (~1 in 6 boxes) being far more generous than MUR rates. Supply has caught up with initial demand, and the card appears to be finding its floor.

The card also carries competitive value: Rosa’s Encouragement is a Supporter that lets you draw cards while attaching Energy, making it a staple in several JPN meta decks. That dual appeal — playability plus fan-favorite character art — gives it a price floor that pure collector cards lack.

#3 Meowth ex SAR — Competitive Staple Meets Beautiful Art

Meowth ex might be the most important card in this set for tournament players. Its ability “Okunote Catch” lets you search your deck for any Supporter card once per turn — an effect that slots into virtually every deck archetype.

The SAR version at ¥12,000 (~$77) has actually climbed from its initial post-launch dip, driven by sustained tournament demand. The illustration shows Meowth in a traditional maneki-neko (beckoning cat) pose, which resonated strongly with Japanese collectors. This is one of the few cards in the set where competitive utility and collector appeal are reinforcing each other’s price floor.

#4–10 Quick Hits

#4 Mega Starmie ex SAR (¥5,000 / ~$32) — Gorgeous cosmic illustration that has appreciated from its ¥4,000 launch price. Mega Starmie sees some competitive play as a versatile attacker, and the art quality continues to attract collectors.

#5 Mega Zygarde ex SAR (¥3,500 / ~$23) — The “budget” version of the flagship card. Same Pokemon, different art treatment. Has actually climbed from its ¥2,300 post-launch dip, likely buoyed by players wanting Zygarde representation without the MUR price tag.

#6 Mega Clefable ex SAR (¥2,800 / ~$18) — Clefable’s Fairy-type nostalgia drives collector interest. The Mega form is exclusive to the Z-A era, adding novelty value. Steady upward movement since launch.

#7 Rosa’s Encouragement SR (¥2,500 / ~$16) — The standard Secret Rare version of the #2 card. Same competitive utility, less premium art. Strong entry point for players who need the card for decks.

#8 Meowth ex SR (¥2,000 / ~$13) — Competitive necessity at a reasonable price. If you’re building decks in J-Regulation, you likely need this card. Price has firmed up since launch as tournament demand grows.

#9 Yukari SAR (¥1,800 / ~$12) — A new Supporter character without existing fan base, which explains the lower price. Art quality is high, but character recognition drives SAR pricing more than illustration alone.

#10 Poke Pad SR (¥1,100 / ~$7) — A useful Item card with utility across multiple deck types. Price has climbed as J-Regulation deck building picks up, making this a consistent staple.

Should You Buy a Nihil Zero Box?

The answer depends on what you’re after — and right now, with launch premiums behind us, the entry point is more accessible than it was a month ago.

For Collectors — Chase the Art, Not the MUR

Nihil Zero has genuinely strong art across its SAR lineup. Rosa’s Encouragement, Meowth ex, and Mega Starmie ex are all top-tier illustrations. At ~$45 per box, you’re getting 30 packs with guaranteed ARs and a reasonable shot at SARs.

Collector Recommendation

Buy 1–3 boxes for the opening experience. Set a budget you’re comfortable treating as entertainment spending, not investment. If you specifically want the MUR or Rosa SAR, buy them as singles after prices stabilize further.

For Players — Key Competitive Cards

Two cards from Nihil Zero are already shaping the J-Regulation meta:

  • Meowth ex — Supporter search ability. Near-universal inclusion across deck types.
  • Rosa’s Encouragement — Draw + Energy attachment. Strong in acceleration-based strategies.

Both are available as affordable SR/RR versions. You don’t need the SAR to play competitively.

For Investors — JPN Premium & Sealed Value

Sealed JPN boxes have historically appreciated once print runs end. Nihil Zero is the first J-Regulation set, which gives it “first of era” appeal similar to early Scarlet & Violet sets.

The English release (Perfect Order, March 27) is imminent, which typically creates short-term price pressure on JPN versions — this can work in your favor as a buying opportunity. The current ~¥7,000 box price is near the lowest since release, and the stabilization window around 2-3 months post-release has historically marked a strong entry point for sealed box holdings.

Buyer Type Recommendation Key Reason
Collector Buy 1-3 boxes Strong SAR art, fun opening experience at ~$45/box
Player Buy singles Meowth ex RR & Rosa RR available under $5 each
Investor Buy now — near floor pricing First J-Reg set, “era starter” sealed value at ¥7,000

Pull Rates — What Are Your Actual Odds?

Most English-language guides describe Nihil Zero pull rates as “low” or “extremely rare” without giving you numbers. Here are the actual figures, sourced from Japanese opening data aggregated across multiple large-scale box breaks.

Rarity Cards in Set Per Box (30 packs) Per Pack Approx. Odds
MUR 1 ~0.02 ~0.07% 1 in 50 boxes
SAR 6 ~0.17 ~0.56% 1 in 6 boxes
SR (Pokemon/Supp.) 8 ~1 ~3.3% ~1 per box
SR (Trainer Items) 4 ~1 ~3.3% ~1 per box
AR 12 3 10% 3 per box
RR 8 4 13.3% 4 per box

Pull rate data estimated from Japanese opening reports. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Nihil Zero pull rate visualization showing cards per box by rarity
Pull rate breakdown per box (30 packs). Data from Japanese opening reports.

MUR Pull Rate — The Brutal Math

MUR Reality Check

At one MUR per 50 boxes, you’d need to spend approximately ¥350,000 (~$2,258) at market price to statistically expect one Mega Zygarde ex MUR. The card itself trades at ¥35,000 (~$226). Buying the single is roughly 10x more cost-efficient than chasing it through sealed product.

To put it in perspective: a standard case contains 12 boxes. You’d need to open over four full cases — 1,500+ packs — for a statistical coin flip at pulling the MUR.

SAR, SR, AR & RR Breakdown

SARs are far more accessible at roughly 1 in every 6 boxes. With six different SARs in the set, you can expect to see one every ~36 boxes on average for any specific SAR you’re targeting.

The guaranteed minimums per box keep each opening interesting:

  • 3 Art Rares (AR) — from a pool of 12 designs
  • 4 Double Rares (RR) — from a pool of 8
  • 1–2 Secret Rares (SR) — the most consistent source of value per box

These guaranteed pulls form the backbone of your box value, which brings us to the EV calculation.

Box EV Breakdown — What the Numbers Say

Every Pokemon TCG box has a negative expected value on paper — if cards were worth more than the box, no one would sell sealed product. That’s the baseline reality across the hobby. Here’s the Nihil Zero breakdown using March 2026 market data.

EV Calculation at Market Price (~¥7,000 / ~$45)

Rarity Avg Cards/Box Avg Card Value (¥) EV Contribution (¥)
MUR 0.02 ¥35,000 ¥700
SAR 0.17 ¥7,683 ¥1,306
SR (Pokemon/Supp.) 1.0 ¥2,250 ¥2,250
SR (Items) 1.0 ¥1,100 ¥1,100
AR 3.0 ¥350 ¥1,050
RR 4.0 ¥250 ¥1,000
R/U/C 21.8 ~¥10 ¥218
Total EV ¥7,624 (~$49)
Nihil Zero box EV breakdown chart showing expected value by rarity tier
EV contribution by rarity tier vs box price (¥7,000). March 2026 market data.
EV Summary

At current market price of ~¥7,000: EV is positive by ~¥624 (~$4) per box. This is unusual for Pokemon TCG sealed product — competitive staples like Meowth ex and Rosa’s Encouragement have firmed up in price, while the box price has dropped since launch. The guaranteed SR, AR, and RR pulls form a solid value floor in every box.

What This Actually Means When You Open

  • ~85% of boxes return ¥4,500-7,500 in card value (SRs, ARs, RRs only)
  • ~13% of boxes return ¥10,000-18,000 (hit a SAR)
  • ~2% of boxes return ¥40,000+ (hit the MUR)

The opening experience itself — 30 packs, guaranteed ARs and RRs, a shot at SARs — is where the value lives for most buyers. The MUR is a lottery ticket, not a business plan.

Singles vs Sealed — The Break-Even Analysis

Goal Sealed (1 Box) Singles Verdict
Mega Zygarde MUR ¥7,000 x 50 boxes = ¥350,000 ¥35,000 Singles: 10x cheaper
Rosa SAR ¥7,000 x 6 boxes = ¥42,000 ¥21,000 Singles: ~2x cheaper
Meowth ex (playable RR) ¥7,000 x 1 box ¥500 Singles: 14x cheaper
Opening experience + random hits ¥7,000 N/A Sealed: priceless

If you want specific cards, buy singles. If you want the experience of opening packs and building a collection organically, sealed boxes are the way — just go in with realistic expectations.

Where to Buy Nihil Zero from Japan

Buying Boxes — What to Expect

Samurai Sword INC ships sealed Nihil Zero boxes directly from Tokyo with tracked shipping. Every box is inspected and serial-tracked for authenticity — if a searched or resealed box is ever reported, we trace it back to the source and ban that supplier permanently.

Other options and current market price ranges:

  • eBay (US sellers): $50-$75, typically with free shipping
  • Specialty JPN card shops: $45-$60 + shipping
  • Direct from Japan: ¥7,000 (~$45) + international shipping (~$10-20)

When buying sealed boxes, verify the shrink wrap is intact. Japanese boxes come factory-sealed with a clear film — any box without shrink wrap has been opened and cannot guarantee pack integrity.

Shipping, Customs & What to Know

  • US: No import duty on trading cards under $800. Most single-box orders clear customs without fees.
  • UK: VAT (20%) applies on imports over £135. Budget an additional ~£10–15 per box.
  • Canada: GST/HST may apply. Declared value under CAD$20 is duty-free (rarely applies to box orders).
  • Australia: GST (10%) on goods over AUD$1,000. Single boxes typically fall under this threshold.

Shipping from Japan to the US typically takes 5–10 business days via tracked services. Express options (DHL, FedEx) cut that to 2–4 days at a premium.

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.

The Bottom Line on Nihil Zero

Three things to remember:

  1. If you want the MUR, buy the single. At 1-in-50-box odds, chasing it through sealed product costs roughly 10x more than the card itself.
  2. Boxes are at their best price yet. At ~¥7,000 (~$45), you’re getting 30 packs with guaranteed ARs and RRs, plus a real shot at SARs. Box EV is currently positive — a rarity for Pokemon TCG sealed product.
  3. First J-Regulation set carries long-term appeal. Whether you’re opening or holding sealed, Nihil Zero’s “era starter” status gives it a collector profile that similar sets have historically rewarded.

Nihil Zero is a solid set with strong art, a game-defining Meowth ex, and the collector prestige of the first J-Regulation MUR. Whether you go sealed or singles, the data above gives you everything you need to decide.

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Nihil Zero (Nihil Zero) Booster Box
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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the pull rates for Nihil Zero (Nihil Zero)?

Based on Japanese opening data, the MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) appears in approximately 1 out of every 50 boxes. SARs (Special Art Rares) appear in roughly 1 out of every 6 boxes. Each box guarantees at least 3 Art Rares, 4 Double Rares, and 1–2 Secret Rares. These rates are estimated from community data and are not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

What is the most expensive card in Nihil Zero?

As of March 2026, the Mega Zygarde ex MUR (card 117/080) is the most valuable at approximately ¥35,000 (~$226 USD). It launched at ¥60,000 on day one and has settled about 42% below its launch price. The second most valuable card is Rosa’s Encouragement SAR at ¥21,000 (~$135).

Is a Nihil Zero booster box worth buying?

It depends on your goal. For collectors who enjoy opening packs, boxes at ~$45-70 USD offer guaranteed ARs and RRs with a reasonable chance at SARs. For players seeking specific competitive cards like Meowth ex, buying singles is significantly cheaper. For investors, the current ¥7,000 price is near the lowest since release, with “era starter” appeal as the first J-Regulation set.

What is the expected value (EV) of a Nihil Zero box?

At the current market price of ~¥7,000 ($45), the expected value of cards inside a box is approximately ¥7,624 (~$49) — a positive EV of about ¥624 (~$4). This is unusual for Pokemon TCG sealed product and reflects the combination of falling box prices and rising competitive staple values.

When does the English version of Nihil Zero come out?

The English-language equivalent is called Mega Evolution: Perfect Order, scheduled for release on March 27, 2026 — approximately two months after the Japanese release. The English set will incorporate cards from Nihil Zero along with cards from other Japanese sets.

What is a MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) card?

MUR stands for Mega Ultra Rare, a rarity tier introduced in the Pokemon TCG MEGA series. MUR cards feature a full gold-etched finish covering the entire card surface. Only one MUR card exists per set, making it the rarest and most valuable card in each MEGA expansion. The Nihil Zero MUR is Mega Zygarde ex (117/080).

How does Nihil Zero compare to Mega Dream ex?

Mega Dream ex (released November 2025) is a High Class Pack focused on collection value with a higher price point (¥550/pack). Nihil Zero is a standard expansion (¥180/pack) geared toward competitive play and the new J-Regulation format. Mega Dream ex has more chase cards across its larger set, while Nihil Zero concentrates value in fewer cards — most notably the MUR.


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Ninja Spinner 抽卡概率、最佳卡牌与盒子价值

Mega Greninja ex MUR just sold for ¥94,223 ($628) on the Japanese secondary market — making it the single most valuable card in the entire MEGA series.

Ninja Spinner (M4) dropped in Japan on March 13, 2026, and the early opening data is in. Over 1,000 boxes have been tracked by Japanese collectors, giving us real pull rate numbers instead of estimates. The headline: SAR pulls land at roughly 1-in-3 boxes, while MUR sits at a brutal 1-in-50.

This guide covers every data point that matters: the Top 10 most valuable cards with actual market prices from SNKRDUNK and Mercari, verified pull rates from large-scale Japanese opening data, a full EV breakdown against the ¥10,000 box price, and a direct comparison between the JPN release and the English Chaos Rising set arriving May 22.

Our team ships over 100 JPN booster boxes from Tokyo every week. Here’s what the real numbers show for Ninja Spinner.

Key Takeaway

Mega Greninja ex MUR is trading at ¥94,223 ($628) — the most valuable card in the MEGA series. At a 33% SAR pull rate and ¥10,000 per box, Ninja Spinner offers one of the strongest value propositions in the MEGA era, with a 70-day head start over the English Chaos Rising release.

¥10,000
Box Price

~120
Total Cards

~1/3
SAR Rate

89%
Box EV Ratio

Ninja Spinner Set Overview

Ninja Spinner is the fourth expansion in the MEGA series and the first set to feature Mega Greninja ex — the Mega Evolution of the most popular Pokemon in the world.

Set Specs

Detail Info
Set Name Ninja Spinner (ニンジャスピナー)
Set Code M4
Series MEGA Expansion Pack
JPN Release March 13, 2026
ENG Equivalent Chaos Rising — May 22, 2026
Total Cards 83 base + ~37 secret rares (~120 total)
Packs/Box 30 packs × 5 cards
MSRP ¥5,400 → Market price: ¥10,000 (~$67)
Rarity Breakdown MUR: 1 · SAR: 6 · SR: 18 · AR: 12 · RR: 8

Prices as of March 2026. Secondary market prices.

What’s New in M4

Mega Greninja ex headlines the set with a devastating 280-damage Ninja Spinner attack and the Lethal Shuriken ability that places 9 damage counters before attacking. Two trainer supporters — Roxie and AZ — get Special Art Rares, alongside four Mega Evolution Pokemon ex cards.

The competitive standouts are Big Catch Net (search your deck for any Basic Pokemon) and Bubble Water Energy (prevents retreat cost increases). Both cards are shaping early MEGA-format deck building.

JPN vs English Release Timeline

Version Release Date Pre-release Set Size
JPN (Ninja Spinner) March 13, 2026 ~120 cards
ENG (Chaos Rising) May 22, 2026 May 9-17, 2026 120+ cards

JPN buyers get a 2-month head start on chase cards. Historically, JPN versions of MEGA series cards have traded at a 15-40% premium over their English counterparts.

Top 10 Most Valuable Cards in Ninja Spinner

Mega Greninja ex dominates — the MUR alone is worth more than the rest of the Top 10 combined.

All prices below reflect actual Japanese secondary market transactions as of March 2026, sourced from Mercari sold listings and SNKRDUNK data.

Rank Card Rarity Price (¥) Price (USD)
1 Mega Greninja ex MUR ¥94,223 ~$628
2 Mega Greninja ex SAR ¥40,429 ~$270
3 Cinccino ex SAR ¥3,803 ~$25
4 Mega Greninja ex SR ¥3,404 ~$23
5 Mega Floette ex SAR ¥3,246 ~$22
6 Roxie’s Performance SAR ¥3,143 ~$21
7 Mega Dragalge ex SAR ¥3,133 ~$21
8 AZ’s Tranquility SAR ¥1,584 ~$11
9 Special Red Card SR ¥1,407 ~$9
10 Mathieu SR ¥1,220 ~$8
Mega Greninja ex MUR from Ninja Spinner, valued at ¥94,223
Mega Greninja ex MUR card — the most valuable card in the MEGA series

#1 Mega Greninja ex (MUR) — ¥94,223 (~$628)

The crown jewel of Ninja Spinner and the entire MEGA series to date. Greninja won Pokemon of the Year in 2020 with over 140,000 votes, and this is its first-ever Mega Evolution card. The MUR variant features a full-art illustration with premium texture that’s already drawing PSA submission interest from grading enthusiasts.

At ¥94,223, it has room to grow. The Mega Charizard X ex MUR from Inferno X launched at ¥100,000 and has climbed to ¥138,000 after months of steady appreciation. Greninja’s broader international fanbase could drive a similar trajectory.

The catch: MUR pulls at roughly 1-in-50 boxes (2%). At ¥10,000 per box, that’s a ¥500,000 average investment to pull one. The singles market is the realistic path for most collectors.

#2 Mega Greninja ex (SAR) — ¥40,429 (~$270)

The Special Art Rare is the realistic chase card. At a 33% SAR rate per box and six SAR variants in the set, each individual SAR has roughly a 5.5% per-box chance — meaning the Greninja SAR specifically appears in about 1-in-18 boxes.

The ¥40,429 price tag makes it the second most valuable SAR in the current MEGA series, behind only Mega Gengar ex SAR from MEGA Dream ex. For Greninja collectors, this is the card to target.

Mega Greninja ex SAR Special Art Rare from Ninja Spinner set
Mega Greninja ex SAR card from Ninja Spinner

#3 Cinccino ex (SAR) — ¥3,803 (~$25)

A surprise entry at third place. Cinccino’s cute design and the ex treatment give it appeal beyond competitive use. The gap between #2 and #3 tells the story — this is firmly a Greninja-driven set.

Cinccino ex SAR Special Art Rare from Ninja Spinner, third most valuable card
Cinccino ex SAR card from Ninja Spinner

#4 Mega Greninja ex (SR) — ¥3,404 (~$23)

The Super Rare variant offers the Mega Greninja artwork at a fraction of the SAR/MUR price. For players who want the card in their deck, this is the practical option.

#5 Mega Floette ex (SAR) — ¥3,246 (~$22)

Floette’s evolution into Mega Floette ex brings strong energy acceleration to the competitive scene, and the SAR illustration has drawn collector attention for its elegant design.

#6 Roxie’s Performance (SAR) — ¥3,143 (~$21)

Roxie’s supporter SAR features dynamic concert artwork. Trainer SARs tend to hold value well as the collector base for character art is loyal.

#7 Mega Dragalge ex (SAR) — ¥3,133 (~$21)

The poison-dragon Mega Evolution gets a moody Special Art Rare. Competitive players are eyeing Mega Dragalge ex for its disruptive ability in the MEGA format.

#8 AZ’s Tranquility (SAR) — ¥1,584 (~$11)

AZ’s supporter card connects to the Kalos storyline from Pokemon X/Y. The SAR features the tall, somber character in a reflective scene. At ¥1,584, it’s the most affordable SAR in the set.

Roxie's Performance SAR supporter card from Ninja Spinner with concert artwork
Roxie’s Performance SAR card from Ninja Spinner

#9 Special Red Card (SR) — ¥1,407 (~$9)

A highly playable trainer card that’s seeing competitive adoption. The SR variant adds collection value to a card you’ll want in your deck regardless.

#10 Mathieu (SR) — ¥1,220 (~$8)

Rounding out the Top 10, Mathieu’s SR provides another supporter option for the MEGA format.

Ninja Spinner M4 Japanese Pokemon booster box sealed
Ninja Spinner booster box sealed with shrink wrap

Should You Buy a Ninja Spinner Box?

At ¥10,000 (~$67) per box, Ninja Spinner sits at the affordable end of the MEGA series spectrum — and the 33% SAR pull rate is the real story here.

For Collectors: Strong Buy

Greninja is the single most popular Pokemon globally, and three of the Top 10 cards feature Mega Greninja ex across MUR, SAR, and SR rarities. The 33% SAR rate means roughly 1-in-3 boxes contains a Special Art Rare worth ¥1,584-¥40,429. Those are solid odds.

If you’re a Greninja fan specifically, this is a must-open set. If you prefer guaranteed value, buying the SAR single at ¥40,429 (~$270) locks in the card without the variance.

Collector’s Tip

Open 3 boxes (¥30,000) for the best odds: statistically, you’ll pull at least 1 SAR. If it’s the Greninja SAR (1-in-6 chance among SARs), that single card covers all three boxes.

For Competitive Players: Selective Buy

Big Catch Net and Bubble Water Energy are the meta-relevant cards from this set. Both are regular rarity and available for under ¥300 each as singles. Special Red Card (SR, ¥1,407) is seeing competitive play across multiple archetypes.

If you’re buying strictly for play, singles are more efficient than boxes. But if you also collect, the box gives you competitive staples plus chase card upside.

For Sealed Collectors: Buy Now

At ¥10,000, Ninja Spinner boxes are among the cheapest sealed MEGA products. Compare that to MEGA Dream ex at ¥9,200 (High Class Pack) or Inferno X at ¥8,000 (which launched at ¥7,500 and has appreciated). Greninja’s enduring popularity suggests strong long-term sealed demand.

Feature Ninja Spinner (M4) MEGA Dream ex (M2A) Inferno X (M3)
Type Expansion Pack High Class Pack Expansion Pack
BOX Price ¥10,000 (~$67) ¥9,200 (~$61) ¥8,000 (~$53)
Top Card Value ¥94,223 (MUR) ¥89,000 (MUR) ¥138,000 (MUR)
SAR Rate ~1/3 boxes ~1/4 boxes ~1/5 boxes
Chase Pokemon Greninja Gengar Charizard
Packs/Box 30 10 30

Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

Every Ninja Spinner box guarantees 4 RRs, 3 ARs, and 1 SR-or-better card. The data below comes from Japanese community tracking of 1,000+ box openings.

Pull Rates by Rarity

Rarity Per Box Chance Notes
RR (Double Rare) 4 Guaranteed 4 per box, every box
AR (Art Rare) 3 Guaranteed 3 per box, every box
SR (Super Rare) ~0.77 ~65% of boxes Fills the high-rarity slot when no SAR/MUR
SAR (Special Art Rare) ~0.33 ~33% of boxes 1-in-3 boxes (6 variants)
MUR (Mega Ultra Rare) ~0.02 ~2% of boxes 1-in-50 boxes

Pull rate estimates based on 1,000+ box community data. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company.

Box EV Calculation

Here’s what an average Ninja Spinner box returns in card value, based on current market prices:

Rarity Cards/Box Avg Card Value EV Contribution
MUR 0.02 ¥94,223 ¥1,884
SAR 0.33 ¥9,223 ¥3,044
SR 0.65 ¥700 ¥455
AR 3.0 ¥750 ¥2,250
RR 4.0 ¥200 ¥800
R/U/C bulk 22.0 ~¥20 ¥440
Total Box EV ¥8,873
Box EV Summary

BOX price: ¥10,000 → Total EV: ¥8,873 → EV ratio: 89%. The SAR slot alone contributes ¥3,044 (34%) of total box value.

For a standard expansion pack, 89% EV is strong. The SAR slot does the heavy lifting — that 33% chance at a card pool averaging ¥9,223 contributes ¥3,044 to every box’s expected value. The MUR adds another ¥1,884 in expected value despite the 2% pull rate, purely because of its ¥94,223 price tag.

Ninja Spinner pull rate breakdown showing SAR 33% and MUR 2% chances per box
Pull rate distribution chart for Ninja Spinner

Variance Reality Check

Most boxes will return ¥3,500-¥5,000 in value (SR + ARs + RRs). The EV rises to ¥8,873 because roughly 1-in-3 boxes hits a SAR worth ¥1,584-¥40,429, and 1-in-50 hits the MUR jackpot.

If you open 3 boxes (¥30,000), you’ll likely pull at least one SAR. If that SAR is the Greninja (roughly 1-in-6 SARs), your single-card return is ¥40,429 — more than covering all three boxes.

JPN vs English: Ninja Spinner vs Chaos Rising

The English equivalent — Chaos Rising — arrives May 22, 2026. Here’s how the two versions compare for buyers deciding which to pick up.

Release Timeline

JPN buyers have had Ninja Spinner since March 13. That’s a 70-day head start over English Chaos Rising. For collectors who want to grade and flip, early PSA submissions on JPN cards will return before Chaos Rising even launches.

Historical JPN Premium

JPN MEGA series cards have consistently traded above their English counterparts:

  • MUR cards: 25-40% JPN premium
  • SAR cards: 15-30% JPN premium
  • SR cards: 10-20% JPN premium

This premium typically peaks in the first 3 months after the English release, then gradually narrows over 6-12 months. Read our full Japanese vs English Pokemon cards comparison for detailed data.

Which Version Should You Buy?

Factor JPN (Ninja Spinner) ENG (Chaos Rising)
Release March 13, 2026 ✓ May 22, 2026
Box Price ~$67 (¥10,000) ~$50-60 (estimated)
Card Premium 15-40% higher Baseline
Grading Appeal Higher PSA 10 rates Standard
Tournament Play JPN-only events Official tournaments ✓
Resale Market Global demand Regional demand
Version Verdict

Collectors: JPN version — the 15-40% premium and 70-day early access are worth the extra $10-15 per box.
Competitive players: Wait for Chaos Rising — English cards required for sanctioned tournaments.
Investors: JPN sealed boxes — Greninja’s global popularity means the JPN premium should hold.

Where to Buy Ninja Spinner

Ninja Spinner boxes are available through Japanese export shops that ship worldwide.

Buy from Japan

Our store carries Ninja Spinner booster boxes with shrink wrap intact and serial-tracked authentication. Every box is individually serial-numbered — if any tampering is detected, we can trace it back to the source and ban the supplier. That’s the level of quality control we maintain on every box that leaves Tokyo.

For more on buying Japanese Pokemon cards internationally, check our complete guide to buying from Japan.

Shipping & Import Tips

  • Delivery: 5-10 business days to US/UK/AU
  • Tracking: Full tracking on all orders
  • Customs: US import duty is currently 15% on trading cards (as of March 2026)
Ninja Spinner M4 booster box available for international shipping from Japan
Ninja Spinner booster box product photo
Shop This Set
Ninja Spinner Booster Box (M4)
From ~$67 / ~¥10,000
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery · Serial-tracked authentication

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The Bottom Line

Three things to know about Ninja Spinner:

  1. Mega Greninja ex MUR at ¥94,223 ($628) is the MEGA series’ biggest chase card — and at 2% pull rate, the singles market is the realistic path for most collectors
  2. SAR at 33% pull rate is the real value story — 1-in-3 boxes hits a SAR averaging ¥9,223. That’s strong for a ¥10,000 box
  3. JPN version gives you 70 days before Chaos Rising — plus a 15-40% price premium that historically holds for 6-12 months

If Greninja is your Pokemon, this set is built for you. If you’re on the fence, the 89% EV ratio and 33% SAR rate make Ninja Spinner one of the better value propositions in the MEGA series.

Check out our complete ranking of all MEGA series sets to see how Ninja Spinner stacks up.

Froakie AR Art Rare from Ninja Spinner, most valuable AR card in the set at ¥1,280
Froakie AR card from Ninja Spinner — top Art Rare in the set

FAQ

What are the actual pull rates for Ninja Spinner?

Based on 1,000+ box community data: 4 RRs and 3 ARs guaranteed per box, plus 1 SR/SAR/MUR slot. SAR rate is approximately 33% (1-in-3 boxes), and MUR rate is approximately 2% (1-in-50 boxes). These are community-tracked estimates, not officially confirmed rates.

How much is Mega Greninja ex MUR worth?

As of March 2026, Mega Greninja ex MUR is trading at approximately ¥94,223 (~$628) on the Japanese secondary market. Buy-back prices from shops are ¥60,000-70,000. Prices may adjust as the market stabilizes post-launch.

Is a Ninja Spinner box worth buying?

At ¥10,000 (~$67), the box EV is approximately ¥8,873 (89% return). The 33% SAR pull rate gives you solid odds at cards worth ¥1,584-¥40,429. For Greninja collectors, it’s a strong buy. For pure investment, sealed boxes may offer better long-term returns than opening.

When does Ninja Spinner release in English?

The English equivalent, Chaos Rising, releases May 22, 2026, with pre-release events from May 9-17. It will contain the same Mega Greninja ex cards adapted from Ninja Spinner plus cards from other JPN sets.

How many SARs are in the Ninja Spinner set?

Ninja Spinner contains 6 Special Art Rare cards: Mega Greninja ex, Cinccino ex, Mega Floette ex, Roxie’s Performance, Mega Dragalge ex, and AZ’s Tranquility. Each box has approximately a 33% chance of containing one SAR.

What’s the difference between Ninja Spinner and MEGA Dream ex?

Ninja Spinner is a standard expansion pack (30 packs, ¥5,400 MSRP) while MEGA Dream ex is a High Class Pack (10 packs, higher rarity rates). Ninja Spinner has a 33% SAR rate versus MEGA Dream ex’s ~25%. The top chase cards differ: Mega Greninja ex MUR (¥94,223) vs Mega Gengar ex MUR (¥89,000).

Will Mega Greninja ex go up in value?

Historically, Pokemon of the Year characters and debut cards tend to appreciate. Mega Charizard X MUR from Inferno X launched at ¥100,000 and rose to ¥138,000. Greninja has comparable popularity, but past performance does not guarantee future results. Monitor the market through SNKRDUNK for real-time pricing.

Should I buy JPN Ninja Spinner or wait for English Chaos Rising?

JPN versions of MEGA series cards trade at a 15-40% premium over English versions. The JPN release gives you a 70-day head start for collecting and grading. If you want cards for competitive tournament play, wait for Chaos Rising (English cards required). For collecting and investment, JPN is the stronger choice.



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MEGA Dream ex 抽卡概率、最佳卡牌与盒子价值 (M2A)

Ascended Heroes just hit shelves in English — but did you know the Japanese original, MEGA Dream ex, gives you roughly 2-3x better odds at pulling a Special Art Rare?

That one stat alone is why JPN boxes keep selling out of our Tokyo warehouse. Since the English set launched on January 30, 2026, we’ve shipped more MEGA Dream ex boxes internationally than any other product this quarter. Collectors and players worldwide are catching on: the JPN version is the better deal.

Four months after launch, prices have settled from their initial premium to much more accessible levels. A box that cost ¥12,000 in December now trades around ¥9,400 — and the card pool is exceptional.

This guide breaks down every number you need. We cover the top 10 most valuable cards with current March 2026 pricing from SNKRDUNK and Mercari, detailed pull rates from thousands of Japanese box openings, a full EV calculation, and the error card phenomenon that’s created some of the most valuable cards in modern Pokemon TCG history.

Key Takeaway

MEGA Dream ex offers the best pull rates of any current Pokemon TCG product. JPN boxes have 2-3x better SAR odds than the English Ascended Heroes equivalent, and current box prices (¥9,400 / ~$60) are at their most accessible point since launch.

¥9,400
Box Price

250
Cards

~1/27
SAR Rate

10
Packs/Box

MEGA Dream ex — Set Overview & What Makes It Special

MEGA Dream ex is the 2025 year-end High Class Pack, and it marks a turning point for the Pokemon TCG: the return of Mega Evolutions. This set sits in the same premium lineage as VSTAR Universe, Shiny Treasure ex, and Terastal Festival ex — annual special releases that consistently become some of the most collected JPN sets.

Release Date, Price & Pack Contents

Detail Info
Set name ハイクラスパック MEGAドリームex (M2a)
JPN release November 28, 2025
ENG equivalent Ascended Heroes — January 30, 2026
Cards in set 250 total (193 standard + 57 secret)
Pack contents 10 cards per pack
Box contents 10 packs per box
MSRP ¥5,500 (~$35) → Market price: ¥9,400 (~$60) on SNKRDUNK / ~$75-80 on eBay

Source: SNKRDUNK

The secret rare breakdown is massive: 20 AR, 9 SR, 10 MA, 17 SAR, and 1 MUR. That’s 57 cards above standard rarity — more chase cards than any recent expansion pack.

New Rarity: Mega Attack Rare (MA)

MEGA Dream ex introduces an entirely new card rarity: the Mega Attack Rare MA. These 10 cards feature Full Art Mega Evolution Pokemon ex rendered in a bold pop art style, with the card’s signature attack written in large English text across the foreground.

All 10 MA cards are guaranteed — you pull exactly one per box. The 10 Mega Pokemon featured are Charizard X, Gengar, Dragonite, Lucario, Gardevoir, Froslass, Diancie, Eelektross, Hawlucha, and Scrafty. Each has HP between 250 and 370, making them among the highest-HP cards in the game.

Mega Charizard X ex MA card from MEGA Dream ex

Mega Charizard X ex MA
¥6,300 (~$40)

Mega Lucario ex MA card from MEGA Dream ex

Mega Lucario ex MA
¥1,500 (~$10)

Mega Gardevoir ex MA card from MEGA Dream ex

Mega Gardevoir ex MA
¥800 (~$5)

JPN vs English Release Timeline

The English equivalent, Ascended Heroes, launched January 30, 2026 — two months after the Japanese release. Ascended Heroes pulls from both MEGA Dream ex and the Start Deck 100 Battle Collection, creating a 295-card set.

Here’s the critical difference for buyers: Japanese MEGA Dream ex pull rates are roughly 2-3x better than Ascended Heroes for premium rarities. The SAR odds in JPN boxes sit at approximately 1/27 packs, while English Ascended Heroes data shows rates closer to 1/67-91 packs. We break this down in detail below.

Top 10 Most Valuable MEGA Dream ex Cards

Mega Gengar ex SAR holds the crown at over $300, driven by Gengar’s massive global fanbase and a stunning illustration. Four months after release, the top cards have settled into stable price ranges — and several are showing signs of recovery.

MEGA Dream ex top 3 most valuable cards Mega Gengar SAR Pikachu SAR Mega Dragonite MUR
Top 3 chase cards: Mega Gengar ex SAR, Mega Dragonite ex MUR, Pikachu ex SAR

#1-3 Deep Dive

#1 — Mega Gengar ex SAR (#240/193)

Mega Gengar ex SAR dominates this set. Trading at approximately $309 (¥48,000 on Mercari / SNKRDUNK), this card combines Gengar’s status as one of the most popular Pokemon worldwide with a Special Art Rare illustration that fans immediately labeled one of the best in the Scarlet & Violet era. The SAR pull rate for any specific card sits around 1 in 40 boxes, making this genuinely scarce. Collectors and competitive players both want it — Gengar’s playability in the current meta adds demand beyond pure aesthetics. PSA 10 submissions have been flowing through at an 87% hit rate, with graded copies commanding approximately ¥89,000 (~$571) — a significant premium over raw cards.

#2 — Mega Dragonite ex MUR (#250/193)

The Mega Ultra Rare — a new top-tier rarity debuting in this set — goes to Mega Dragonite. At $231 (¥36,000 on SNKRDUNK), this card is the hardest pull in MEGA Dream ex: roughly 1 in 50 boxes, or about 1 in 500 packs. That scarcity alone drives the price, but the gold-accented artwork featuring Dragonite’s Mega Evolution has earned strong collector praise. MUR is this generation’s answer to the UR gold cards — and Dragonite was the right choice for the debut.

#3 — Pikachu ex SAR (#234/193)

Pikachu ex SAR sits at $255 (¥40,000 on SNKRDUNK) — and it has been one of the strongest performers in this set. Since January, Mercari transaction prices have climbed from around ¥20,000 to ¥40,000 — a 100% gain driven by sustained collector demand and Pikachu’s evergreen popularity. The combination of Pikachu’s universal appeal, a compelling SAR illustration, and actual competitive viability makes this card attractive to every segment of the market.

#4-10 Quick Rankings

Rank Card Rarity Price (USD) JPN Price (¥)
4 Mega Dragonite ex SAR $177 ¥27,600
5 Team Rocket’s Mewtwo ex SAR $126 ¥19,700
6 N’s Zoroark ex SAR $59 ¥9,200
7 Canari SAR $45 ¥7,000
8 Iono’s Bellibolt ex SAR $44 ¥6,900
9 Marnie’s Grimmsnarl ex SAR $41 ¥6,400
10 Mega Charizard X ex MA $40 ¥6,300

Prices as of March 2026. Based on SNKRDUNK/Mercari (JPN) and PriceCharting (USD). Secondary market prices. (at ¥156/USD)

Team Rocket’s Mewtwo ex at #5 represents the Legends Z-A trainer card lineup — these character-associated SARs have consistently held value in recent sets. Mega Charizard X ex at #10 is the top-performing MA card, proving that the new rarity has collectible appeal even without the SAR designation.

Should You Buy a MEGA Dream ex Box?

For most collectors, MEGA Dream ex is one of the strongest box purchases available right now. The combination of guaranteed high-rarity pulls (1 MA + 3 AR + 1 SR per box), generous SAR odds, and a card pool featuring iconic Mega Evolutions makes this a box that delivers consistent satisfaction.

Buying Tip

At the current ¥9,400 price point, MEGA Dream ex offers exceptional value per guaranteed hit. Every box delivers at least 9 cards above standard rarity — and half of all boxes include a bonus SAR or SR supporter on top of that.

For Collectors

Open this box. Every box guarantees at least 9 hits above standard rarity, and the 50/50 split between “basic” and “hit” patterns means half of all boxes contain a SAR or supporter SR on top of the guaranteed pulls.

The artwork across all rarities is exceptional. The MA cards bring a completely new aesthetic to Pokemon TCG with their pop art styling and English attack text. Art Rares cover a wide range of popular Pokemon, and the SAR pool is deep — 17 different Special Art Rares mean you’re unlikely to pull duplicates across multiple boxes.

For Players

MEGA Dream ex reprints competitive staples from the entire 2024-2025 card pool. If you missed key cards from Cyber Judge, Crimson Haze, or Stellar Miracle, this set fills those gaps. One box gives you a solid foundation of playable Mega Evolution ex and supporting trainers.

The guaranteed SR (non-supporter) per box is particularly relevant — many of these are tournament-viable Pokemon ex that slot directly into current meta decks.

For Sealed Collectors

This is the first High Class Pack of the Mega Evolution era — the same milestone position that VSTAR Universe held for the VSTAR era. Historically, year-end HCPs have shown strong long-term appreciation as sealed products. The MEGA Dream ex BOX has already corrected from its ¥12,000 launch premium to ¥9,400, putting it at a more accessible entry point for long-term holds.

JPN Box vs English Ascended Heroes

JPN MEGA Dream ex

  • Box price: ~$60-80
  • SAR rate: ~1/27 packs (37%/box)
  • MA guaranteed: 1 per box
  • 250 cards in set
  • MUR rate: ~1/500 packs
  • JPN cards trade 15-40% higher

ENG Ascended Heroes

  • Box price: ~$45-55
  • SAR rate: ~1/67-91 packs (~12-15%/box)
  • MA guaranteed: 1 per box
  • 295 cards in set
  • MUR rate: ~1/1,000+ packs (est.)
  • Base price for ENG market

The JPN box costs more upfront, but your odds of pulling a premium card are 2-3x better. JPN cards also historically command a 15-40% price premium over their English counterparts, meaning your pulls hold more value long-term. For a comprehensive breakdown, see our Japanese vs English Pokemon Cards comparison.

Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown

Every Pokemon TCG box has a negative expected value on paper — that’s the standard structure across all sets, not a flaw unique to MEGA Dream ex. Understanding this context matters before we run the numbers: you’re paying for the opening experience, the guaranteed hits, and the chance at a chase card. The math here actually makes MEGA Dream ex one of the best EV propositions among current Pokemon TCG products.

Pull Rates by Rarity

Rarity Cards in Set Per-Pack Odds Per Box (10 packs) Guaranteed?
RR ~1/2.5 4 Yes
AR 20 ~1/3.3 3 Yes
SR (Non-supporter) 3 ~1/10 1 Yes
MA 10 ~1/10 1 Yes
Mirror/Reverse ~1/1.4 7 Yes
SR (Supporter) 6 ~1/118 ~0.085 No
SAR 17 ~1/27 ~0.37 No
MUR 1 ~1/500 ~0.02 No

Estimated from 1,000+ Japanese box openings. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company. Source: CardChill

MEGA Dream ex pull rates visualization showing cards per box by rarity
Pull rates by rarity — guaranteed pulls in blue/green/purple, chance pulls in pink/gold

Two Box Patterns

Japanese box opening data reveals two distinct patterns, each appearing in roughly 50% of boxes:

Basic Pattern (50% of boxes): 4 RR + 3 AR + 1 SR (non-supporter) + 1 MA + 7 mirrors = 16 hits total

Hit Pattern (50% of boxes): Basic contents PLUS 1 additional SAR or SR supporter = 17 hits total

This means every other box you open has an extra premium pull built in. Combined with the 37% SAR rate per box, you have strong odds of pulling something exciting.

Box EV Calculation

EV Summary

Total box EV: ~$67 against a box cost of ~$75-80 (international) / ~$60 (JPN domestic). At -11% for international buyers, this is significantly better than the typical -40 to -50% seen in standard expansion boxes.

Rarity Pull Rate/Box Avg Value EV Contribution
RR × 4 Guaranteed ~$1.50 $6.00
AR × 3 Guaranteed ~$2.50 $7.50
SR × 1 Guaranteed ~$3.00 $3.00
MA × 1 Guaranteed ~$11.00 $11.00
Mirror × 7 Guaranteed ~$1.00 $7.00
SAR 37% ~$73 $27.01
MUR 2% ~$231 $4.62
SR (Supporter) 8.5% ~$10 $0.85
Total EV ~$67
MEGA Dream ex box EV breakdown chart showing expected value contribution by rarity
EV breakdown by rarity tier — SAR chance pulls contribute the most value per box

God Pack

A small percentage of MEGA Dream ex boxes (~0.5%) contain a God Pack: a single extraordinary pack containing 1 Art Rare + 5 Mega Attack Rares + 4 Special Art Rares — 10 premium cards in one pack. The estimated odds are roughly 1 in 133-200 boxes. If you hit one, you’re looking at $500+ in card value from a single pack.

The Error Card Phenomenon

MEGA Dream ex made headlines for an unusual reason: all 10 Mega Attack Rare cards in the initial print run had a surface finishing defect. The card name text lacks the proper embossed treatment, creating a visually distinct “error” version.

The Pokemon Company acknowledged the defect and offered free exchanges for correctly printed cards. But collectors had a different reaction — error versions immediately became sought-after rarities.

Error Card Alert

If you purchased early print run MEGA Dream ex boxes, check your MA cards carefully. The error version (missing embossed card name) now trades at 7-25x the price of corrected versions. The Charizard X error alone is worth over ¥160,000 (~$1,026). Most collectors are choosing to keep the errors rather than exchange them.

Error Card Price Impact

MA Card Normal Price Error Price Premium
Mega Charizard X ex ¥6,300 (~$40) ¥160,000+ (~$1,026) ~25x
Mega Gengar ex ¥3,900 (~$25) ¥75,000+ (~$481) ~19x
Mega Dragonite ex ¥2,300 (~$15) ¥15,000+ (~$96) ~7x
Mega Lucario ex ¥1,500 (~$10) ¥10,000+ (~$64) ~7x
Mega Gardevoir ex ¥800 (~$5) ¥10,000+ (~$64) ~13x

Prices as of March 2026. Error cards are from initial print runs only. Source: SNKRDUNK

Between December 2025 and February 2026, error card prices jumped significantly across all 10 MA variants. The Mega Charizard X ex error reached ¥168,000 (~$1,077) at its peak and still trades around ¥160,000 — making it one of the most valuable cards in the modern Pokemon TCG. If you bought early MEGA Dream ex boxes, check your MA cards carefully — the error version is worth dramatically more than the corrected print.

Mega Charizard X ex MA error card from MEGA Dream ex initial print run

Mega Charizard X ex MA Error
¥160,000+ (~$1,026)

Mega Gengar ex MA error card from MEGA Dream ex initial print run

Mega Gengar ex MA Error
¥75,000+ (~$481)

Mega Dragonite ex MA error card from MEGA Dream ex initial print run

Mega Dragonite ex MA Error
¥15,000+ (~$96)

Where to Buy MEGA Dream ex

If you’re outside Japan, importing JPN boxes is straightforward with the right seller.

What to Look For

  • Sealed, shrink-wrapped boxes — confirm the shrink wrap is intact with the official Pokemon Company seal
  • Shipped from Japan — domestic JPN stock ensures authenticity
  • Tracked shipping — international packages should include tracking and insurance

Our shop ships directly from Tokyo with tracked international delivery. We handle customs documentation so you don’t have to navigate JPN shipping logistics yourself. Every box is serial-tracked — if a box is ever found to be searched or resealed, we trace it back to the source and permanently ban that supplier.

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.

The Bottom Line

Three key takeaways from our analysis:

  1. MEGA Dream ex has the best pull rates of any current Pokemon TCG product. The 37% SAR rate per box and guaranteed MA make this a standout for collectors. JPN boxes offer 2-3x better odds than the English Ascended Heroes equivalent.
  2. Current pricing is at its most accessible point. BOX prices have settled to ¥9,400 (~$75-80 internationally) from the ¥12,000 launch premium. Pikachu ex SAR has doubled since January and Mega Gengar SAR has stabilized, suggesting the price floor has been established.
  3. The error card phenomenon adds a unique collecting angle. If you’re buying early print run boxes, the MA error cards represent an unexpected value multiplier that no other recent set offers.

Whether you’re opening for the thrill, building a competitive deck, or adding sealed boxes to your collection — MEGA Dream ex delivers at every level.

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MEGA Dream ex Booster Box
From ~$60 / ~¥9,400
Ships from Tokyo · Tracked delivery

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many packs are in a MEGA Dream ex booster box?

Each MEGA Dream ex booster box contains 10 packs, with 10 cards per pack — 100 cards total per box. Every box guarantees at least 1 MA (Mega Attack Rare), 3 AR (Art Rare), 1 SR (Super Rare), 4 RR (Double Rare), and 7 mirror/reverse holo cards. About 50% of boxes include an additional SAR or SR supporter pull.

What are the pull rates for SAR in MEGA Dream ex?

Based on data from over 1,000 Japanese pack openings, SAR (Special Art Rare) cards appear at approximately 1 in 27 packs, giving you roughly a 37% chance per box. For a specific SAR like Mega Gengar, the odds drop to approximately 1 in 40 boxes due to the 17-card SAR pool.

Is it better to buy a box or singles?

For collectors who enjoy the opening experience: buy the box. The guaranteed MA + 3 AR + 1 SR per box, combined with the 37% SAR chance, makes MEGA Dream ex one of the better sealed products for value. For players who need specific competitive cards: buy singles. You can acquire exactly the cards you need for less than one box costs.

What is the difference between MEGA Dream ex and Ascended Heroes?

MEGA Dream ex is the Japanese High Class Pack released November 28, 2025. Ascended Heroes is the English equivalent released January 30, 2026 with 295 cards (vs 250 in the JPN set). The critical difference is pull rates: JPN SAR odds are approximately 1/27 packs versus 1/67-91 in English Ascended Heroes — making JPN boxes 2-3x more generous.

What is a Mega Attack Rare (MA)?

MA is a brand-new rarity exclusive to the MEGA Dream ex era. These Full Art Mega Evolution cards feature pop art styling with the card’s signature attack written in large English text. There are 10 MA cards in the set, and exactly 1 is guaranteed per box.

How much is a MEGA Dream ex booster box?

As of March 2026, boxes trade at approximately ¥9,400 (~$60) on SNKRDUNK in Japan, and $75-80 on eBay for international buyers.

What is a God Pack in MEGA Dream ex?

A God Pack is an ultra-rare pack containing 1 Art Rare + 5 Mega Attack Rares + 4 Special Art Rares — 10 premium cards in a single pack instead of the normal distribution. The estimated probability is approximately 0.5%, or roughly 1 in 133-200 boxes. God Packs can contain over $500 in total card value.

Are MEGA Dream ex error cards valuable?

Yes. All 10 MA cards from the initial print run had a surface finishing defect. Error versions now trade at 7-25x the price of corrected versions. The Mega Charizard X ex MA error currently trades around ¥160,000 (~$1,026), and PSA 10 graded copies have reached approximately ¥290,000 (~$1,859). The Pokemon Company offers free exchanges, but most collectors prefer to keep the error versions.


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