Secret Wonders

With 132 cards and a wide common-to-holo spread, Secret Wonders offers plenty of room to collect by illustration style as well as by rarity. Charizard is the set’s top-priced card in the available pricing data, while much of the checklist sits in more accessible territory.

Released
Nov 2007
Cards
132 printed
Illustrators
25
Top card
Charizard $136
Series
Diamond & Pearl
Era
EX era

120 unique Pokémon 120 Pokémon · 10 Trainer · 2 Energy Average market $6.65

§ 01 — The full checklist

Browse the 132 cards.

Filter by type, rarity, illustrator.

Showing 132 of 132 cards
Rarity
Ampharos
Blastoise
Charizard
Entei
Flygon
Gallade
Gardevoir
Gastrodon East Sea
Gastrodon West Sea
Ho-Oh
Jumpluff
Lickilicky
Ludicolo
Lugia
Mew
§ 02 — About Secret Wonders

A look inside the set.

Secret Wonders presents a broad 132-card collection with an overwhelmingly Pokémon-forward structure: 120 Pokémon cards alongside 10 Trainers and 2 Energy. Its rarity profile is anchored by Commons and Uncommons, then lifts into a substantial band of Rare and Rare Holo cards, with just two Rare Holo LV.X entries. Across the set, the dominant visual language favors cartoonish, colorful rendering and a consistently readable layout—simple, balanced, and focused compositions that keep the character front and center.

The set’s mood trends playful and lighthearted, often supported by vibrant palettes that skew bright, pastel, and soft, with occasional contrasting accents. Among the visual highlights, Ho-Oh and Absol stand out for their stronger aesthetic pull within the set’s generally clean presentation. The illustrator roster is deep, led by Ken Sugimori and supported by steady contributions from Kouki Saitou, Kazuyuki Kano, and Kagemaru Himeno, giving the collection a cohesive, studio-forward feel while still allowing for subtle shifts in linework and energy.

I · Visual identity

The set’s visual identity is clean and character-forward: simple, balanced frames, focused subjects, and a generally straightforward sense of space. Color is the main driver—vibrant and bright overall, frequently softened by pastel and gentle tones, with occasional contrasting pops. The prevailing mood stays playful and lighthearted, with just small pockets of mystery or intensity.

II · Illustrators

Ken Sugimori leads the set’s credited output, establishing a consistent baseline across many cards. Kouki Saitou, Kazuyuki Kano, and Kagemaru Himeno also appear frequently, collectively shaping a cohesive look that stays readable and upbeat while varying line weight, texture, and motion from card to card.

§ 04 — Entry points

Two ways in.

By the hands behind it, or by the Pokémon featured. Both threads continue across the wider Artchu catalogue.

Notable illustrators from Secret Wonders

All illustrators →

Notable Pokémon featured

All Pokémon →