With 182 cards and a substantial Common-to-Holo spread, Skyridge offers both breadth for set-building and select premium targets. Charizard (ecard3-146) is the primary high-end reference point, while much of the set’s visual character is accessible across lower rarities.
108 unique Pokémon · 156 Pokémon · 23 Trainer · 3 Energy · Average market $85.72
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Skyridge presents a broad 182-card collection with a clear emphasis on Pokémon artwork: 156 Pokémon cards alongside 23 Trainers and 3 Energy. Its rarity mix spans Commons through Rare Holos, with a small pocket of Rare Secret cards, giving the set a wide visual cadence from everyday scenes to more premium finishes. Across the set, the dominant look is cartoonish and traditional illustration, guided by playful and lighthearted moods and anchored by simple, balanced, focused compositions.
Color does much of the work here: vibrant palettes lead, often paired with contrast, warm tones, and occasional pastel softness. Among the visual highlights, Umbreon (ecard3-H30) stands out for its overall art impression, with Articuno (ecard3-4) also offering a strong showcase within the set’s brighter spectrum. The illustrator roster is dense and consistent, with Mitsuhiro Arita and Atsuko Nishida among the most represented names, helping define the set’s steady illustration-first identity.
Skyridge reads as bright, illustration-led, and character-forward: cartoonish and traditional renderings dominate, framed in simple, balanced layouts that keep subjects clear and centered. The mood stays mostly playful and lighthearted, with occasional mysterious notes, while color leans heavily vibrant—often contrasting—tempered by warm, pastel, and earthy accents.
The set’s most frequent contributors include Mitsuhiro Arita and Atsuko Nishida, whose repeated appearances help keep the visual language cohesive across rarities. Their work sits comfortably within Skyridge’s prevailing mix of cartoonish clarity and traditional illustration, reinforcing the set’s bright, approachable tone.
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.