With 209 priced cards and a broad rarity ladder, Rebel Clash offers both easy entry points and a smaller tier of premium variants. Boss’s Orders (swsh2-189) sits at the top of the set’s market range, while much of the checklist remains comparatively accessible.
153 unique Pokémon · 176 Pokémon · 28 Trainer · 5 Energy · Average market $1.92
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Rebel Clash presents a wide, gallery-like spread: 209 cards in total, anchored by 176 Pokémon cards alongside 28 Trainers and 5 Energy. With 75 illustrators contributing, the set reads as a varied but cohesive visual collection, where bright color and clear staging keep even busy scenes easy to scan. Its rarity mix spans Commons and Uncommons through Ultra, Rainbow, VMAX, and Secret rarities, giving the artwork multiple finishes and presentation tiers.
The dominant look is playful and energetic, driven by cartoonish and digital rendering, frequent dynamic poses, and a strong preference for vibrant, contrasting palettes. Visual highlights include Boss’s Orders (swsh2-200) and Dragapult VMAX (swsh2-197), both standing out within the set’s upper-end presentation. Among the most represented contributors, 5ban Graphics and aky CG Works shape much of the set’s digital language, while Kouki Saitou and Mitsuhiro Arita add stylistic range across character-focused scenes.
Rebel Clash favors a bright, upbeat visual language: cartoonish and digital finishes, lively character acting, and frequent motion cues within balanced, readable layouts. Vibrant palettes dominate, often pushed with contrast; the overall mood stays playful and energetic, with occasional turns toward mysterious or intense scenes for variety.
The set’s look is strongly shaped by 5ban Graphics and aky CG Works, whose high card counts reinforce a consistent digital sheen across many Pokémon and higher-rarity treatments. Kouki Saitou and Mitsuhiro Arita appear frequently enough to register as recurring voices, adding contrast through differing linework, staging, and character presence.
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.