S10B 宝可梦 GO 抽卡概率,最佳卡牌与盒装指南 (2026)

The Japanese S10B Pokemon GO set has one card that doesn’t exist in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) release: the Mewtwo V Special Art at 074/071, currently trading at ¥13,000–17,800 (~$85–120) on altema.jp. That single difference is why Mewtwo collectors who care about alt art chase the Japanese box specifically — and why S10B continues to hold premium pricing 3.5 years after its June 2022 launch.
S10B is the only Pokemon TCG set ever built around the Pokemon GO mobile game crossover. It introduced four Radiant Pokemon (Venusaur, Blastoise, Charizard, and Eevee), the peelable Ditto gimmick that hides Ditto under common Pokemon cards, and a pack structure that guarantees two holos per pack instead of the usual one. The set has been out of print for over two years, and the 2026 Pokemon 30th anniversary has pulled renewed attention toward Kanto-focused releases like this one.
This guide breaks down the full S10B picture: all 10 most valuable cards ranked by JPN market prices, pull rate estimates translated from Japanese opening compilations, box EV math using Altema data, the JPN vs ENG differences that matter, and a 3.5-year price trajectory showing why Card Rush is buying boxes at ¥14,000 while SNKRDUNK’s lowest listing sits at ¥21,800. We handle Japanese Pokemon TCG boxes every week — here’s what we tell buyers asking about Pokemon GO.
S10B Pokemon GO is the only Pokemon TCG set with the Mewtwo V Special Art (074/071), a JPN-exclusive card that doesn’t exist in the English PGO release. At ~$100/box with four guaranteed Radiant Kanto Pokemon and a ~20% chance per box of any SA, S10B offers one of the most reliable EV floors in the Sword & Shield era. Out of print since late 2023.
What Is S10B Pokemon GO? Set Overview
S10B Pokemon GO is the Japanese enhanced expansion pack (強化拡張パック) released on June 17, 2022, designed as a direct crossover with the Pokemon GO mobile game. The set brought Pokemon GO’s visual identity — Team Leaders, raid mechanics, candy rewards — into the physical TCG for the only time in the game’s history.
Set Specs
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Set Code | S10B |
| Japanese Name | ポケモンGO |
| Series | Sword & Shield |
| Category | Enhanced Expansion Pack (強化拡張パック) |
| Release Date | June 17, 2022 |
| Packs per Box | 20 |
| Cards per Pack | 6 (2 holos guaranteed) |
| Main Set | 71 cards |
| Secret Rares | 22 cards (12 SR incl. 2 SA, 7 HR, 3 UR) |
| Total Cards | 93 |
| MSRP | ¥5,200 → Market price: ¥14,000–21,800 (~$93–145) as of April 2026 |
Enhanced Expansion Pack Structure
Enhanced expansion packs like S10B sit between regular expansion packs (standard S11 or S12) and premium high-class packs like VSTAR Universe. Three things distinguish them: 20 packs per box instead of 30, 6 cards per pack instead of 5, and a guaranteed two-holo pack structure that puts a Pokemon V-or-better card in every single pack alongside a reverse holo. That’s 40 holo cards per box, not 20.
The trade-off: the total card pool is smaller (71 main + 22 secrets = 93 cards vs. 127 for S11), and only one SR-or-higher is guaranteed per box instead of the 1.2+ average from regular expansions. But the double-holo pack structure makes every pack feel like a “hit pack,” which is why enhanced expansions tend to be the most fun boxes to open for casual buyers.
Pokemon GO Theme and the Peelable Ditto
S10B isn’t just themed around Pokemon GO — it mechanically borrows from it. Team leaders Candela, Spark, and Blanche appear as Trainer cards with full-art SR treatments. Professor Willow, the game’s researcher, gets his own HR. Lure Modules and Egg Incubators appear as UR Trainer items. Even the card backs carry Pokemon GO visual motifs.
The set’s fan-favorite gimmick is the peelable Ditto. A handful of S10B commons feature Ditto hidden beneath the surface art — collectors can peel back a thin top layer to reveal a Ditto portrait underneath. For open-sealed collectors, the peelable Ditto is one of the most unique gimmicks in modern Japanese Pokemon TCG history.
Why S10B Still Matters in 2026
Three reasons: the set has been out of print since late 2023, Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 has renewed demand for Kanto-focused releases (S10B is Kanto-dense — Mewtwo, Charizard, Blastoise, Venusaur all get headline spots), and the Japanese version contains two Special Art cards (Mewtwo V SA and Conkeldurr V SA) that simply do not exist in the English PGO release. For Mewtwo collectors, the JPN S10B box is the only sealed product in existence that can pull a Mewtwo V Special Art.
The Mewtwo V SA (074/071) and Conkeldurr V SA (076/071) are Japanese-only Special Art cards. Neither has an equivalent in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) set. For Mewtwo master collectors worldwide, the JPN S10B box is the only sealed product that can produce a Mewtwo V Special Art.
Top 10 Most Valuable S10B Pokemon GO Cards
Mewtwo V SA sits at the top of this set’s value chart at roughly 4× the price of the second-most valuable card. The top 10 below uses current JPN market data from Altema (April 2026), with USD conversions at approximately ¥150/USD.

| Rank | Card | Number | Rarity | JPN Price (¥) | USD Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mewtwo V (Special Art) | 074/071 | SR (SA) | ¥13,000–17,800 | ~$85–120 |
| 2 | Mewtwo VSTAR | 091/071 | UR | ¥6,500–8,980 | ~$43–60 |
| 3 | Mewtwo VSTAR | 084/071 | HR | ¥4,000–5,980 | ~$27–40 |
| 4 | Dragonite VSTAR | 086/071 | HR | ¥3,000–3,780 | ~$20–25 |
| 5 | Radiant Charizard | 011/071 | K | ¥2,700–3,580 | ~$18–24 |
| 6 | Mewtwo V | 073/071 | SR | ¥2,000–2,780 | ~$13–18 |
| 7 | Conkeldurr V (Special Art) | 076/071 | SR (SA) | ¥1,580–1,980 | ~$10–13 |
| 8 | Radiant Blastoise | 018/071 | K | ¥1,500–1,980 | ~$10–13 |
| 9 | Dragonite V | 078/071 | SR | ¥1,300–1,780 | ~$9–12 |
| 10 | Radiant Eevee | 040/071 | K | ¥1,200–1,580 | ~$8–10 |
Prices from altema.jp, SNKRDUNK, and Card Rush as of April 2026. USD conversions at ~¥150/USD. Secondary market prices. JPN cards typically trade at a 15–40% premium over English equivalents for high-demand cards.
#1 Mewtwo V SA (074/071) — ~$85–120
The Mewtwo V Special Art is the card that defines S10B for Japanese collectors. Illustrated as a full-bleed portrait with Mewtwo in a meditative pose against a deep purple void, it’s the only Japanese full-art Mewtwo V in the entire Sword & Shield era. The card trades at ¥13,000–17,800 on altema.jp as of April 2026, with Card Rush’s buy price at ¥8,980.
Here’s the important detail no English guide mentions: this card does not exist in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) set. The English release has a Mewtwo V #30 (standard full art) and Mewtwo VSTAR alternate arts, but there’s no equivalent to the Japanese 074/071 Special Art treatment. For Mewtwo master set collectors, chasing the JPN S10B box is the only path.
PSA 10 copies trade at a meaningful premium — recent sales data from PriceCharting shows graded copies in the $180–220 range, giving graders roughly a 2× return on the raw cost. Mewtwo has unmatched collector staying power (Kanto original, anime icon, Pokemon GO raid boss, 30th anniversary headliner), which is why this card has held above $80 for most of 2024 and 2025 despite broader S10B price movement.
#2 Mewtwo VSTAR UR (091/071) — ~$43–60

The gold-textured Ultra Rare Mewtwo VSTAR at ¥6,500–8,980 (~$43–60) is S10B’s highest-numbered secret rare and the set’s premier display card. The gold leafing treatment on a Mewtwo illustration hits different than standard rainbow rares — the metallic backdrop makes Mewtwo’s psychic energy glow with a warmth that collectors keep in the top slot of binders. PSA 10 copies trade around $80–110.
#3 Mewtwo VSTAR HR (084/071) — ~$27–40
The Mewtwo VSTAR Hyper Rare at ¥4,000–5,980 uses a rainbow rare treatment over a dynamic Star Raid VSTAR Power composition. It’s a more accessible Mewtwo VSTAR display card than the UR version and pairs well alongside the SA at ~$27–40 per copy. For buyers who want “a Mewtwo VSTAR special rare” without paying UR prices, the HR is the value pick.
#4 Dragonite VSTAR HR (086/071) — ~$20–25

The Dragonite VSTAR HR at ¥3,000–3,780 (~$20–25) is the Kanto community’s other headline chase. Dragonite consistently ranks as one of the most beloved non-starter Kanto Pokemon, and S10B is one of the only modern sets that gives Dragonite a VSTAR treatment. The HR artwork uses a sunset-orange background that makes it a standout display card.
#5 Radiant Charizard (011/071) — ~$18–24

Radiant Charizard is the card that pulls casual collectors into the S10B box. At ¥2,700–3,580 (~$18–24), it’s the most accessible “grail” pull in the set — and because Radiants appear at roughly 1–2 per box, every Pokemon GO box opener has realistic odds of pulling this Charizard on their first try. The shiny gold-accented illustration pairs Charizard against a flame backdrop using the shiny-Pokemon color palette rather than standard orange.
Radiant Charizard is one of four Radiant Pokemon in S10B (alongside Radiant Venusaur, Radiant Blastoise, and Radiant Eevee) — the first Radiant cards ever printed. For Charizard collectors specifically, this was the first “shiny Charizard” treatment in Sword & Shield.
#6 Mewtwo V SR (073/071) — ~$13–18
The standard full-art Mewtwo V SR at ¥2,000–2,780 is the baseline Mewtwo V pull — not the Special Art, but still carrying Mewtwo’s full collector premium. This is the SR version of the same Mewtwo V that appears in the main set as RR. Recommended for Mewtwo completionists who don’t want to spend $100+ on the SA.
#7 Conkeldurr V SA (076/071) — ~$10–13

The second JPN-exclusive Special Art in S10B. Conkeldurr doesn’t have Mewtwo’s cultural star power, but the SA treatment at ¥1,580–1,980 (~$10–13) makes this card unique to Japanese collectors. There is no English equivalent to this card in the PGO set. For SA completionists who want both JPN-exclusive alt arts, Conkeldurr V SA is the lower-profile counterpart to Mewtwo V SA.
Cards #8–10
- Radiant Blastoise (018/071) (¥1,500–1,980 / ~$10–13) — The Kanto starter alongside Venusaur and Charizard as Radiants. Uses the shiny blue-white color treatment over the classic Kanto #009 design.
- Dragonite V SR (078/071) (¥1,300–1,780 / ~$9–12) — The standard full-art Dragonite V SR. Pairs with the Dragonite VSTAR HR for Kanto pseudo-legendary collectors.
- Radiant Eevee (040/071) (¥1,200–1,580 / ~$8–10) — The fourth and final Radiant in S10B. Eevee consistently has the broadest collector base in Pokemon, and this card is a common binder-staple for Eevee main collectors.
For the complete S10B card list with all 93 cards, see our S10B Pokemon GO Card List page.
Should You Buy a Pokemon GO Booster Box?
At ~$100 USD per box, S10B sits below S11 Lost Abyss and S12 Paradigm Trigger in absolute price — but the EV math and buying decision work differently because of the enhanced expansion pack structure and the JPN-exclusive SA cards. Here’s how it breaks down by buyer type.
If you want the Mewtwo V SA specifically, buying the single at ~$85–120 is far cheaper than chasing through boxes (estimated ~25 boxes for a specific SA pull). But if you want the full S10B experience with multiple Radiants, Conkeldurr V SA, and a realistic chance at Mewtwo V SA, 2–5 boxes deliver the best balance.
For Pokemon GO Fans and Kanto Collectors
This is the most straightforward “yes” in the Pokemon TCG catalog. If you played Pokemon GO during the 2016–2022 peak, S10B is the only physical TCG set ever built around the mobile game’s visual identity. The Team Leaders (Candela, Spark, Blanche) are here in full art. Professor Willow is here. Lure Modules and Egg Incubators are tangible collectibles. And the set’s Kanto focus — Mewtwo, Charizard, Blastoise, Venusaur, Dragonite, Eevee — makes it one of the densest Kanto sets in Sword & Shield.
For Kanto-focused collectors, the four Radiants alone justify the box purchase. With 1–2 Radiants per box and four types in rotation, opening a full box typically delivers two Radiant Kanto Pokemon as display pieces.
For Mewtwo V SA Chasers
Here’s where the math gets interesting. Mewtwo V SA trades at ~$85–120 raw. A box at ~$100 has roughly 4% odds of pulling it directly — meaning the expected cost to chase the SA through boxes is around $2,500, or 25 boxes. For pure Mewtwo V SA hunters, buying the single is far cheaper.
But the chase changes if you also want the other JPN exclusives and Radiants. Opening 3–5 boxes gives you realistic odds on Conkeldurr V SA, a Mewtwo VSTAR UR, multiple Radiants, and a chance at the Mewtwo V SA — all alongside the pack-opening experience. For completionists building a full S10B Mewtwo collection, a small number of boxes can be the better path than buying six singles separately.
For Long-Term Holders
S10B has been out of print since late 2023. Card Rush’s current buy price of ¥14,000 reflects dealer confidence that boxes will continue to appreciate — dealers typically buy at 60–70% of their expected resale. At ¥14,000 buy and ¥21,800 SNKRDUNK lowest, the dealer-to-retail gap is consistent with appreciating sealed products in the Sword & Shield era.
The 2026 Pokemon 30th anniversary is a tailwind. Kanto-themed sets are seeing renewed attention across the board, and S10B’s four Kanto Radiants plus Mewtwo V SA put it squarely in the anniversary-driven demand zone.
Singles vs. Box — The Math
| Approach | Cost | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Buy Mewtwo V SA single | ~$85–120 | The exact card, guaranteed |
| Buy 5 boxes for JPN exclusives | ~$500 | ~10 Radiants, 5+ SRs, ~50% chance at Mewtwo V SA, ~50% chance at Conkeldurr V SA, 1–2 VSTAR URs/HRs, 600 total cards |
| Buy 1 box for the experience | ~$100 | 20 packs, 40 guaranteed holos, ~1–2 Radiants, 1 SR-or-higher |
If you only want one specific card, singles win. If you want the full S10B experience with a realistic shot at JPN exclusives and multiple Radiants, 2–5 boxes deliver the best value.
S10B Pull Rates & Box EV Breakdown
S10B follows the enhanced expansion pack pull structure: 20 packs per box, 6 cards per pack, with 2 holos guaranteed per pack. That’s 40 holo cards per box — roughly twice the density of a standard 30-pack expansion. Here’s how the high-rarity pool breaks down.
Pull Rate Breakdown (Per Box — 20 Packs)
| Rarity | Cards in Set | Expected per Box | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| RR (V) | ~12 | 3–4 | Pokemon V cards |
| RRR | ~6 | ~1 | Mewtwo VSTAR, Melmetal VMAX, Dragonite VSTAR |
| K (Radiant) | 4 | 1–2 | Venusaur, Blastoise, Charizard, Eevee |
| SR | 12 (incl. 2 SA) | 1 guaranteed | 10 standard SRs + 2 SAs |
| SA (any) | 2 | ~1 per 5 boxes (~20%) | Mewtwo V SA or Conkeldurr V SA |
| Mewtwo V SA | 1 | ~1 per 25 boxes (~4%) | Split 50/50 with Conkeldurr V SA |
| HR | 7 | ~1 per 10 boxes (~10%) | Rainbow rare treatment |
| UR | 3 | ~1 per 10 boxes (~10%) | Mewtwo VSTAR, Egg Incubator, Lure Module |
Pull rates are estimated from Japanese community opening compilations and baseline enhanced expansion pack structure. Not officially confirmed by The Pokemon Company. Actual results vary.
Enhanced Expansion Pack Guarantee
Every S10B box guarantees at least one SR-tier card (SR or higher). Because the SR pool includes both standard full arts and the 2 SAs, each box has roughly 20% odds of the SR slot being an SA — giving you ~1 in 5 chance of walking away with a Mewtwo V SA or Conkeldurr V SA from a single box.
This is why enhanced expansions are popular with casual openers. Unlike high-class packs where the SR slot can be anything across a massive card pool, S10B’s smaller 93-card total concentrates the secret rare odds into a narrower pool. More focus, higher per-box hit rate for any given chase card.
Mewtwo V SA — The Specific Odds
The number Mewtwo collectors want: approximately 4% per box for the Mewtwo V SA specifically, or roughly 1 in 25 boxes. That’s a harder chase than S11’s Giratina V SA (3.8–6.2%) because S10B has two SAs splitting the SA probability, while S11 has four SAs diluting the per-SA rate further.
At carton level (12 boxes at ~$1,200), Japanese opening data suggests roughly 2–3 SA pulls total, with 50/50 split between Mewtwo V SA and Conkeldurr V SA. So one carton gives you about a 60–70% chance of seeing at least one Mewtwo V SA — though the variance is high.
Box EV Breakdown
Using current Altema JPN prices and pull rate estimates, the expected value per box breaks down as follows:
| Component | Est. Value per Box |
|---|---|
| 1 SR hit (weighted avg. incl. SA probability) | ~¥3,200 (~$21) |
| 1–2 Radiant cards | ~¥3,500 (~$23) |
| ~1 RRR (VSTAR/VMAX) | ~¥800 (~$5) |
| 3–4 RR cards | ~¥400 (~$3) |
| Remaining R/U/C | ~¥200 (~$1) |
| Standard Box EV | ~¥8,100 (~$54) |
Box cost: ~¥14,000–21,800 ($93–145) | Average EV: ~¥8,100 ($54). The SR-weighted average (~¥3,200) accounts for the 20% SA probability, with Mewtwo V SA’s ~$100 value raising the average meaningfully above the 10 standard SRs. Radiants contribute the second-largest EV component.
S10B’s EV structure differs from S11 and S12 in one important way: the Radiant guarantee provides a ~$20–25 EV floor that standard expansion sets don’t have. For value-conscious openers, this “guaranteed Radiant” mechanic gives S10B one of the most reliable EV floors in the Sword & Shield era. For comparison, see our S11 Lost Abyss guide and S12 Paradigm Trigger guide.
S10B vs English Pokemon GO (PGO)
The English Pokemon GO (PGO) release from July 2022 shares the Pokemon GO theme with Japanese S10B, but the two sets have meaningfully different card structures, numbering systems, and pull odds. For buyers choosing between JPN and ENG versions, the differences matter.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Spec | S10B (JPN) | PGO (ENG) |
|---|---|---|
| Release | June 17, 2022 | July 1, 2022 |
| Main Set Cards | 71 | 78 |
| Secret Rares | 22 (12 SR, 7 HR, 3 UR) | ~12 (differently distributed) |
| Total Cards | 93 | ~88 |
| Packs per Box | 20 | 36 |
| Cards per Pack | 6 (2 holos) | 10 |
| Total Cards per Box | 120 | 360 |
| MSRP | ¥5,200 | ~$144 |
| Language | Japanese | English |
What’s Different in the JPN Version
Three JPN-specific cards don’t exist in the English set: Mewtwo V SA (074/071), Conkeldurr V SA (076/071), and the specific peelable Ditto gimmick treatment. The English PGO set has its own exclusive treatments (Giovanni’s Charisma SR, a different Mewtwo VSTAR alt art, rainbow versions of Radiants), but the Mewtwo V Special Art is Japanese-only.
Print quality is another factor. JPN Pokemon cards historically command a 15–40% premium over ENG versions of the same card, driven by superior holofoil textures, tighter print cuts, and the collector preference for original-language releases. For high-value SAs like Mewtwo V, this premium tends toward the higher end.
The Mewtwo V SA (074/071) is Japanese-only. No English equivalent exists in the PGO set. For Mewtwo master set collectors, the JPN S10B box is the only sealed product in existence that can produce a Mewtwo V Special Art.
Which Version to Buy
- Chasing Mewtwo V SA specifically? → JPN S10B box is the only option. The card doesn’t exist in English.
- Want higher pull odds per dollar? → ENG PGO gives you 360 cards per box at a similar box price. More raw pulls, lower per-box SR ceiling.
- Collecting both language versions? → Buy both. The sets are complementary rather than redundant.
- Building a Japanese master set? → JPN S10B is required. No substitute exists.
Most of our international buyers go JPN for one of two reasons: they want the Mewtwo V SA specifically, or they prefer Japanese print quality for long-term holding. For casual openers who just want to pull “the Pokemon GO set,” either version works — but the JPN set is the only one with the peelable Ditto and Special Art cards.
Pokemon GO S10B Price History: 2022 to 2026
The S10B box has traced a different trajectory than premium expansion sets like S11 or S12. Instead of a sharp launch spike followed by reprint crashes, Pokemon GO has been a steady appreciation story since going out of print in late 2023.

BOX Price Journey
| Period | BOX Price (JPN) | BOX Price (USD) | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 2022 (Launch) | ¥5,200 retail → ~¥6,500–8,000 | ~$45–55 | Launch premium, widely available |
| 2022–2023 | ~¥8,000–11,000 | ~$55–75 | Normal Sword & Shield pricing |
| Late 2023 | ~¥12,000 | ~$80 | Production ends, OOP begins |
| 2024 | ~¥13,000–16,000 | ~$85–105 | Steady OOP appreciation |
| 2025 | ~¥15,000–18,000 | ~$100–120 | Pokemon GO 10th anniversary boost |
| Early 2026 | ¥14,000–21,800 | ~$93–145 | 30th anniversary tailwind |
Current Card Rush buy price sits at ¥14,000 and SNKRDUNK’s lowest listing is ¥21,800 as of April 2026. PriceCharting’s international secondary market data shows ungraded boxes trading at ~$77.59 average (eBay), which is below our $100 direct listing because of Japanese-to-international shipping markup and seller inventory freshness.
Mewtwo V SA Price History
- June 2022 (Launch): ~¥5,000–7,000 (~$35–50)
- 2023: Stable at ¥7,000–10,000
- Late 2023 (OOP): Climbed to ¥10,000–12,000
- 2024: ¥12,000–14,000
- 2025: ¥12,000–15,000 (stable with minor fluctuation)
- April 2026: ¥13,000–17,800 (~$85–120 raw)
The card hasn’t had the explosive climbs of Giratina V SA or Lugia V SA, but the consistency is notable. No major crashes, no reprint resets, no speculation-driven spikes. Mewtwo V SA has held above $80 for 18+ months straight — a rare stability profile among modern JPN chase cards.
Why Prices Are Where They Are
- Out of print since late 2023. No reprints have been announced or released. Sealed supply only decreases from here.
- Pokemon 30th anniversary (2026). Kanto-focused sets are seeing renewed attention. S10B’s Kanto Radiants and Mewtwo V SA put it directly in the anniversary demand zone.
- Pokemon GO game longevity. The mobile game still reports 100+ million monthly active users, and the game’s 10th anniversary in 2026 overlaps with the TCG’s 30th.
- Enhanced expansion pack structure. The 40-holo pack format and Radiant guarantee make S10B more appealing to casual openers than standard expansion packs, sustaining consistent demand.
- JPN-exclusive Mewtwo V SA. For Mewtwo master set builders worldwide, this is a required card — and the JPN box is the only sealed product that can produce it.
How S10B Compares to Other Sword & Shield Sets
S10B’s current ¥14,000–21,800 range sits below S11 Lost Abyss (¥33,000–37,500) and above S12 Paradigm Trigger (¥12,000–18,000), reflecting its more accessible chase card value. Compare the chase-card-to-box ratio:
| Set | Chase Card | Card Price | Box Price | Ratio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S11 Lost Abyss | Giratina V SA | ~$984 | ~$220–250 | 4.0–4.5× |
| S12 Paradigm Trigger | Lugia V SA | ~$510 | ~$110 | 4.6× |
| S10B Pokemon GO | Mewtwo V SA | ~$100 | ~$100 | 1.0× |
S10B’s 1.0× ratio is unusual — most sets with a named chase card trade at 4–5× the card’s value. S10B’s box sits at roughly break-even with the Mewtwo V SA, which suggests two possibilities: either the box is undervalued relative to the card, or the card is undervalued relative to peer alt arts. Over time, closing this ratio gap has historically meant either the card price climbs or the box price stays flat.
Where to Buy S10B Pokemon GO Booster Box
Authentic sealed S10B boxes remain available through Japanese TCG specialty retailers. Because the set has been out of print for 2+ years and stocks are shrinking, verification matters more now than it did at launch.
What to Look For
- Factory seal — Authentic S10B boxes have a white Creatures Inc. factory seal. At $100+ price points, resealed boxes are a real concern from unverified sellers.
- 20 packs per box — Enhanced expansion packs use a 20-pack format, not 30. A box should feel appropriately weighted.
- Japanese branding — The box should display ポケモンGO with Pokemon Company Japan branding.
- Seller reputation — Purchase from sellers with a track record in Japanese Pokemon TCG. Ask about sourcing — legitimate boxes come from authorized Japanese distributors, not gray-market importers.
At Samurai Sword Tokyo, we stock sealed Japanese S10B Pokemon GO boxes sourced directly from our Tokyo inventory with tracked international shipping. Stock fluctuates — check our product page for current availability.
Bottom Line
Three things to remember about S10B Pokemon GO:
- Mewtwo V SA is the JPN-only chase — the 074/071 Special Art doesn’t exist in the English PGO set. For Mewtwo master collectors, this is a required JPN purchase with no English alternative.
- Four Radiant Kanto cards create an accessible chase floor — Radiant Venusaur, Blastoise, Charizard, and Eevee at 1–2 per box means every box opener gets at least one Kanto Radiant display piece. The Radiant guarantee is what makes S10B’s EV floor more reliable than standard expansion sets.
- Out of print since late 2023 with 2026 anniversary tailwind — production is finished, sealed supply shrinks with every box opened, and Pokemon’s 30th anniversary has pulled Kanto-focused demand back into the spotlight.
At ~$100 per box, S10B is one of the more accessible premium JPN sealed products in the Sword & Shield era. Whether you open it for the experience, chase the Mewtwo V SA, or hold sealed for long-term appreciation, the set earned its place as the only Pokemon TCG set ever built around the Pokemon GO crossover.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the pull rates for Pokemon GO S10B?
Each 20-pack box guarantees at least one SR-tier card from a pool of 12 SRs (including 2 Special Arts: Mewtwo V SA and Conkeldurr V SA). SA cards appear in approximately 20% of boxes (~1 in 5 boxes for any SA, ~4% per box for Mewtwo V SA specifically). HR cards appear ~10% of the time, and UR cards also ~10%. Each pack contains 2 guaranteed holos, and Radiant Pokemon appear at 1–2 per box. Pull rates are estimated from Japanese opening data and not officially confirmed.
What is the most expensive card in S10B Pokemon GO?
Mewtwo V SA (074/071) at approximately ¥13,000–17,800 (~$85–120 raw) as of April 2026. PSA 10 copies trade in the $180–220 range. It is a Japanese-exclusive Special Art and does not exist in the English Pokemon GO (PGO) set.
Is the Japanese Pokemon GO booster box worth buying in 2026?
At ~$100 per box, S10B offers one of the most reliable EV floors in the Sword & Shield era thanks to the Radiant Pokemon guarantee (1–2 Kanto Radiants per box at $8–24 each). Expected value averages approximately $54, below box cost — standard for Pokemon TCG sealed products. The value proposition lies in the Mewtwo V SA chase, four Kanto Radiants, and the set’s out-of-print status with 2026 30th anniversary tailwind.
How many packs are in a Pokemon GO S10B booster box?
Each S10B box contains 20 packs, with 6 cards per pack — 120 total cards per box. Every pack guarantees 2 holographic cards, meaning each box delivers 40 holos total. This is the enhanced expansion pack (強化拡張パック) format, which differs from standard 30-pack expansions like S11 or S12.
What’s the difference between Japanese S10B and English Pokemon GO?
S10B (Japanese) has 71 main cards + 22 secret rares = 93 total, with 20 packs per box at 6 cards per pack. English PGO has ~78 main cards and 36 packs per box at 10 cards per pack. The biggest difference: Mewtwo V SA (074/071) and Conkeldurr V SA (076/071) are Japanese-exclusive Special Art cards that don’t exist in the English set. Japanese print quality also carries a historical 15–40% premium over English on matched cards.
How much is Radiant Charizard from Pokemon GO worth?
As of April 2026, the Japanese Radiant Charizard (011/071) from S10B trades at ¥2,700–3,580 (~$18–24 raw). PSA 10 graded copies trade at roughly 2× the raw price. Radiant Charizard is one of four Radiant Pokemon in S10B alongside Venusaur, Blastoise, and Eevee, and is the most popular Radiant due to Charizard’s collector demand.
Is Pokemon GO S10B out of print?
Yes. Production ended in late 2023, and no reprints have been announced or released. Sealed box supply has been shrinking for 2+ years, which is one of the drivers behind the current ¥14,000–21,800 JPN price range. The out-of-print status combined with Pokemon’s 30th anniversary in 2026 has pulled renewed attention to Kanto-focused sets like this one.