With only 17 cards and a balanced rarity spread, POP Series 7 is approachable to complete while still offering a few clear visual standouts. The most valuable card is Latias (pop7-3), which can create a modest gap between the set’s baseline cards and its top end.
17 unique Pokémon · 17 Pokémon · Average market $5.27
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POP Series 7 presents a tightly edited 17-card lineup made entirely of Pokémon, with no Trainer or Energy cards. Its rarity mix stays straightforward—Commons, Uncommons, and Rares—so the set reads like a small visual sampler rather than a layered chase structure. Across the roster, the dominant look is cartoonish and whimsical, built around simple, focused compositions that keep each character clearly framed.
The mood trends lighthearted and cheerful, supported by soft, pastel-leaning color palettes that still allow for bright accents. Among the set’s visual highlights, Latias (pop7-3) and Latios (pop7-4) stand out for their polished presentation within this restrained format. The illustrator list is shared across a small group, with Kouki Saitou, Daisuke Ito, Midori Harada, and Kagemaru Himeno contributing multiple cards and helping keep the collection’s tone consistent from card to card.
The set’s visual language is clean and character-forward: simple, focused framing, balanced layouts, and an overall playful, whimsical tone. Color tends toward soft and pastel fields with bright, vibrant notes, keeping scenes readable and upbeat rather than dense or dramatic.
Kouki Saitou, Daisuke Ito, and Midori Harada are the most represented names here, each contributing three cards and reinforcing the set’s light, cartoonish consistency. Kagemaru Himeno also appears multiple times, adding variety while staying within the same clear, approachable visual register.
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.