With 30 cards and 25 illustrators, the set offers breadth without feeling diffuse, and the rarity tiers create a natural way to collect by finish and format. Pikachu VMAX (TG17) is the primary value anchor, while much of the checklist sits in more accessible holo and V slots.
23 unique Pokémon · 24 Pokémon · 6 Trainer · Average market $11.79
Filter by type, rarity, illustrator.
Lost Origin Trainer Gallery condenses its identity into 30 cards, mixing 24 Pokémon with 6 Trainers and no Energy cards. The rarity spread moves from Trainer Gallery Rare Holo through V and VMAX to Ultra and a small pair of Secret cards, giving the set a clear tiered structure. Visually, it reads as a bright, modern selection: anime-leaning illustration dominates, with colorful, playful scenes and frequent bursts of motion.
Compositions tend to stay balanced even when they turn dynamic, keeping the subject in crisp focus and letting contrast do much of the framing. Among the visual highlights, Banette (TG07) and Charizard (TG03) stand out for their confident character-first staging. Pikachu VMAX (TG17) is also the set’s key collector reference point, while the broader lineup keeps the mood energetic, cheerful, and occasionally mysterious within a consistently vibrant palette.
The visual language is bright and high-saturation, with vibrant palettes appearing across nearly the entire set and contrast used to sharpen silhouettes and focal points. Most cards favor balanced layouts that still feel dynamic, centering the character with clean readability; moods skew playful and energetic, with occasional mysterious or intense notes that deepen the range without shifting away from a colorful, anime-led baseline.
The set’s most represented names include Oswaldo KATO, saino misaki, Atsushi Furusawa, and Souichirou Gunjima, each contributing multiple cards. Their presence helps unify the gallery’s contemporary anime-and-illustration mix while still allowing individual pieces to vary in tone from lighthearted to more dramatic.
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.