With 106 cards and a wide common-to-holo structure, Stormfront offers plenty of approachable collecting alongside a smaller group of higher-rarity pulls. Charizard{dp7-103}(257.77|tcgplayer:holofoil) sits at the top of the set’s value range, creating a noticeable spread across the checklist.
81 unique Pokémon · 92 Pokémon · 12 Trainer · 2 Energy · Average market $11.32
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Stormfront presents a broad, Pokémon-led card pool—92 Pokémon cards alongside 12 Trainers and 2 Energy—organized across commons, uncommons, rares, and a smaller tier of holo, LV.X, and secret rarities. The set’s visual rhythm is consistent: bright, vibrant palettes dominate, with balanced, focused layouts and generally simple staging that keeps attention on the subject. Playful and lighthearted moods appear most often, with dynamic energy used as an accent rather than a constant.
Among the set’s visual highlights, Charmeleon{dp7-102}(82) stands out for its overall art appeal, while Dusknoir LV.X{dp7-96}(82) brings a more mysterious edge within the same clean framing. Ryo Ueda and Kent Kanetsuna contribute the largest share of illustrations, shaping much of the set’s look through crisp, readable character presentation. Mitsuhiro Arita adds further variety, helping the collection move between colorful whimsy and occasional intensity without breaking its cohesive, approachable tone.
Stormfront’s visual language is bright and character-centric: vibrant, often contrasting color palettes paired with simple, balanced compositions that keep silhouettes clear and readable. The prevailing mood is playful and lighthearted, with bursts of dynamic motion and occasional mysterious shading; backgrounds tend to stay understated so the featured Pokémon remains the focal point.
Ryo Ueda and Kent Kanetsuna are the most represented illustrators in the set, giving Stormfront much of its consistent, clean character presentation. Mitsuhiro Arita and Kouki Saitou also appear frequently, adding range across the set’s mix of colorful, playful scenes and more focused, dramatic moments.
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.