With all 108 cards priced and a wide spread between median and average, the set mixes many accessible entries with a smaller group of premium rarities. Vaporeon ★ is the single most valuable card in the dataset, while the holo and ex selections provide the main visual peaks.
81 unique Pokémon · 81 Pokémon · 16 Trainer · 11 Energy · Average market $45.32
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Power Keepers presents a compact, evenly structured 108-card collection: 81 Pokémon, 16 Trainers, and 11 Energy cards. Its rarity profile is anchored by Commons and Uncommons, then steps into a substantial band of Rare Holos, with a smaller selection of Rare Holo EX and a few Rare Holo Star cards. Across the set, the dominant visual language favors clarity—simple, focused, balanced layouts that keep the subject readable at a glance.
Stylistically, the set is led by cartoonish and traditional approaches, frequently rendered in vibrant palettes with occasional pastel softness and contrasting accents. The prevailing mood stays playful and energetic, with lighthearted scenes outweighing darker tones. Among the visual highlights, Flygon ex and Gardevoir stand out as high points within the holo lineup, while Shiftry ex adds a sharper, more dynamic note. Artist coverage is broad, but the set’s look coheres through consistent character-forward framing.
Power Keepers reads bright and direct: vibrant, often contrasting color sits on clean, centered compositions that prioritize character presence over elaborate staging. Cartoonish and traditional rendering lead the set, keeping the mood playful and energetic, with occasional calmer or more mysterious notes that still maintain clear silhouettes and balanced framing.
Ken Sugimori anchors the set’s illustration count, establishing a consistent character-design baseline across many cards. Midori Harada and Ryo Ueda add variety in finish and energy—Harada often softer and approachable, Ueda more dynamic and digitally crisp—while Mitsuhiro Arita contributes additional traditional weight within the holo-leaning tiers.
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.