With 130 priced cards and a wide spread between median and average market levels, the set mixes many accessible entries with a smaller number of higher-end chase points. Charizard is the clearest value outlier within the lineup.
100 unique Pokémon · 100 Pokémon · 23 Trainer · 7 Energy · Average market $8.11
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Base Set 2 presents a tightly edited 130-card lineup: 100 Pokémon cards anchored by 23 Trainers and 7 Energy. The rarity profile is evenly structured—Commons and Uncommons lead the count, while 20 Rares and 20 Rare Holos add a measured layer of finish. Visually, the set leans traditional and cartoonish, favoring straightforward readability over complex staging.
Across the card art, playful and lighthearted moods dominate, supported by simple, focused compositions that keep each subject centered and clear. Color tends toward vibrant and pastel palettes, often bright but controlled, with occasional contrasting accents. For visual highlights, Ninetales, Raichu, and Scyther stand out as especially strong examples of the set’s character-first approach. The illustrator roster is compact, giving the collection a consistent hand across its many portraits and scenes.
The visual language is clean and readable: traditional, cartoon-leaning illustration framed by simple, focused compositions and frequent central placement. Playful energy leads the mood, while vibrant and pastel palettes—often bright, sometimes softly limited—keep the set cohesive and easy to scan as a unified gallery.
The set’s look is shaped primarily by Ken Sugimori, supported by substantial contributions from Keiji Kinebuchi and Mitsuhiro Arita, with additional work from Kagemaru Himeno. With only four illustrators across the full checklist, the overall presentation stays consistent from card to card.
Editorial picks — by visual identity, mood, and the work that defines this set's character.
By the hands behind it, or by the Pokémon featured. Both threads continue across the wider Artchu catalogue.