With 284 cards and a wide rarity spread, Fusion Strike offers plenty of accessible pulls alongside a smaller tier of premium rarities. Gengar VMAX (swsh8-271) is the set’s top value point, while the overall experience is driven by breadth and variety rather than a single narrow look.
218 unique Pokémon · 245 Pokémon · 36 Trainer · 3 Energy · Average market $6.27
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Fusion Strike (Sword & Shield) spans 284 cards, with the set’s structure led by 245 Pokémon cards alongside 36 Trainers and 3 Energy. With 80 illustrators contributing, it reads less like a single visual thesis and more like a wide gallery wall: many subjects, frequent character-forward framing, and a consistent preference for clarity. The dominant patterns are cartoonish, playful, and colorful, supported by energetic moods and a steady mix of balanced and dynamic compositions.
Within that bright baseline, the set’s highlights show how far the palette can stretch while staying cohesive. Dancer (swsh8-274) stands out for its visual appeal, while Chandelure VMAX appears in multiple treatments, offering a useful comparison of mood and finish inside the same character. For collectors, Gengar VMAX (swsh8-271) sits at the top of the value range. Among the most present contributors, 5ban Graphics and Yuu Nishida help define the set’s rhythm through repeated appearances.
The set’s visual language is bright and upbeat: vibrant palettes lead, often paired with contrasting accents and occasional pastel softness. Compositions tend toward balanced, focused staging, then pivot into dynamic action when needed, keeping subjects readable and front-facing. Overall moods skew playful, energetic, and lighthearted, with small pockets of mysterious or intense atmosphere.
The most represented names include 5ban Graphics and Yuu Nishida, each appearing across multiple cards and helping set the collection’s steady, character-forward cadence. Misa Tsutsui and Hideki Ishikawa also recur, reinforcing the set’s preference for clean, colorful presentation within a broad, 80-illustrator roster.
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.