With every card marked Promo and a wide spread of art approaches across 15 illustrators, the set rewards collectors who enjoy comparing styles within a tight 40-card scope. Championship Arena (np-28) stands out as the key value outlier, while much of the set sits in a more accessible range.
28 unique Pokémon · 36 Pokémon · 4 Trainer · Average market $155
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Nintendo Black Star Promos gathers 40 Promo cards into a compact, self-contained visual set: 36 Pokémon and 4 Trainers, with no Energy cards. Across 28 Pokémon and 15 illustrators, the collection reads like a curated sampler rather than a single narrative, moving between bright character portraits and more dynamic action moments. The dominant look is colorful and cartoonish, with playful and whimsical notes supported by simple, focused layouts and a largely vibrant palette.
Visual highlights include Rayquaza ex (np-39), Articuno ex (np-32), and Celebi (np-29), each showing how the set shifts from energetic impact to calmer, more serene presentation without losing clarity. Treecko, Mudkip, and Torchic appear most often, giving the lineup a repeating rhythm of familiar forms. Among the leading contributors, Atsuko Nishida, Ken Sugimori, Kouki Saitou, and Ryo Ueda provide much of the set’s stylistic range, from clean character-forward rendering to sharper, more dynamic treatments.
The set’s visual language is built on vibrant color, clean readability, and character-first framing: simple, focused compositions dominate, often balanced and uncluttered. Moods skew playful, cheerful, and energetic, with occasional serene pauses; palettes tend toward bright, warm, and pastel tones, sometimes pushed by contrasting accents for extra snap.
Atsuko Nishida leads the set by card count, with Ken Sugimori, Kouki Saitou, and Ryo Ueda close behind. Together they account for a substantial share of the artwork, spanning straightforward character presentation, more dynamic staging, and a mix of traditional and colorful, cartoon-leaning finishes.
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.