Team Up

With 198 cards and a deep range of rarities, Team Up offers both broad binder-building and a smaller tier of premium pulls. Latias & Latios-GX (sm9-170) is the set’s top market outlier, while much of the checklist sits in more accessible territory.

Released
Feb 2019
Cards
181 printed
Illustrators
47
Top card
Latias & Latios-GX $2,591
Series
Sun & Moon
Era
Sun & Moon era

126 unique Pokémon 155 Pokémon · 43 Trainer Average market $40.64

§ 01 — The full checklist

Browse the 181 cards.

Filter by type, rarity, illustrator.

Showing 198 of 198 cards
Rarity
Celebi & Venusaur-GX
Weedle
Weedle
Kakuna
Beedrill
Paras
Parasect
Exeggcute
Pinsir
Shaymin ◇
Charmander
Charmander
Charmeleon
Charizard
Vulpix
§ 02 — About Team Up

A look inside the set.

Team Up presents a wide, Pokémon-led gallery: 198 cards with 155 Pokémon and 43 Trainers, spanning everything from Commons and Uncommons through Ultra, Rainbow, Secret, and Prism Star rarities. Across the set, the dominant look is colorful and upbeat, with a strong preference for balanced framing and focused subjects. Digital rendering and cartoonish linework appear in near-equal measure, keeping the collection cohesive even as it moves between simple portraits and more dynamic action scenes.

Among the visual highlights, Gengar & Mimikyu-GX (sm9-164) stands out for its moodier edge within an otherwise cheerful field, while Latias & Latios-GX (sm9-190) offers a cleaner, more luminous take on motion and pairing. Alolan Ninetales (sm9-111) adds a softer counterpoint through gentler color handling. The set’s illustrator mix is led by 5ban Graphics, with additional presence from Ken Sugimori, Megumi Mizutani, and Ayaka Yoshida, creating a steady rhythm between graphic clarity and more illustrative character nuance.

I · Visual identity

The prevailing visual language is vibrant and contrasting, built around playful, energetic moods and clear subject emphasis. Most cards use balanced, focused compositions—often character-forward—punctuated by dynamic poses and occasional action framing. Pastel and soft palettes appear as a secondary accent, tempering the set’s generally bright, digital sheen.

II · Illustrators

5ban Graphics anchors the set’s look through a large share of clean, digitally rendered cards. Ken Sugimori contributes a consistent character-design sensibility, while Megumi Mizutani and Ayaka Yoshida add more illustrative variation within the same bright, approachable palette.