Jungle

With only four illustrators across 64 cards and a balanced rarity spread, Jungle reads as a cohesive visual set to complete. Clefable (base2-1) stands out as the set’s top-priced reference point, while much of the checklist remains comparatively accessible.

Released
Jun 1999
Cards
64 printed
Illustrators
4
Top card
Snorlax $292
Series
Base
Era
Founding generation

47 unique Pokémon 63 Pokémon · 1 Trainer Average market $15.29

§ 01 — The full checklist

Browse the 64 cards.

Filter by type, rarity, illustrator.

Showing 64 of 64 cards
Rarity
Clefable
Electrode
Flareon
Jolteon
Kangaskhan
Mr. Mime
Nidoqueen
Pidgeot
Pinsir
Scyther
Snorlax
Vaporeon
Venomoth
Victreebel
Vileplume
§ 02 — About Jungle

A look inside the set.

Jungle presents a tightly edited 64-card collection with 63 Pokémon and a single Trainer card, organized into an even spread of Common, Uncommon, Rare, and Rare Holo cards. Across the set, the art language stays approachable: traditional rendering and cartoon-forward character work dominate, supported by simple, clear layouts that keep each subject easy to read.

The prevailing mood is playful and lighthearted, with occasional serene notes, and the palette tends toward vibrant and pastel tones rather than heavy contrast. Visual highlights include Vaporeon (base2-12) and Flareon (base2-3), both well suited to the set’s centered, focused framing. The illustrator roster is concentrated, led by Kagemaru Himeno, Mitsuhiro Arita, and Ken Sugimori, whose combined output gives the set a consistent, character-first rhythm from card to card.

I · Visual identity

Jungle’s visuals are built around clarity: centered subjects, simple and balanced compositions, and a friendly, playful tone. Traditional and cartoonish styles lead, with whimsical touches and occasional dynamic poses. Color skews vibrant and pastel, often softened rather than heavily shadowed, keeping the set bright and easy on the eye.

II · Illustrators

The set is anchored by a small, consistent illustrator group: Kagemaru Himeno contributes the largest share, followed by Mitsuhiro Arita and Ken Sugimori, with additional work from Keiji Kinebuchi. This limited roster helps maintain a unified character-design sensibility across rarities.

§ 04 — Entry points

Two ways in.

By the hands behind it, or by the Pokémon featured. Both threads continue across the wider Artchu catalogue.

Notable illustrators from Jungle

All illustrators →

Notable Pokémon featured

All Pokémon →