


Evolutions
Pokemon collecting is equal parts binder nostalgia, chase-card electricity, and long-memory set mythology — anchored right now by M Charizard EX.
A tradeable basket for the whole set.
Coverage is live on 100% of the set right now, which is enough to show the market center even before the long tail fully fills in.
Unspecified is the dominant rarity band in this release, while Trainer is the strongest card-family signal on the page today.
Collectors use Pokemon pages to answer three questions fast: what matters in this set, what the chase cards are doing, and what they still need for completion.
Real activity where we have it, honest signals where we do not.
Where the card count is concentrated.
The best current storefronts touching this lane.
Continue the chronology.
Heat signal across the full set.
The strongest gainers right now.
Cards losing momentum in the current window.
Built for real set goals, not generic wishlists.
VaultStore completion tracking is designed for any-copy, any-variant, grade-specific, and language-specific goals. This page already knows the full card map; the collector layer sits on top of it.
Sign in to import a collection CSV, auto-claim VaultStore purchases, or manually mark cards as owned.
Why this set matters right now.
Modern chases, WotC grails, Japanese print runs, and sealed product all hang off the same spine so a collector can move from context to card to listing without changing mental model.
Evolving Skies still behaves like the benchmark modern chase set.
151 keeps pulling casual nostalgia collectors into serious completion tracking.
A destination page, not just a listing grid.
# Evolutions Overview Evolutions represents a significant retrospective release in the Pokemon Trading Card Game, arriving in 2026 as a deliberate callback to the foundational Base Set era. The 113-card set demonstrates the TCG's continued commercial reliance on nostalgia-driven products while exploring mechanical evolution within the established Mega Evolution framework. The set's composition heavily emphasizes Kanto region Pokemon, particularly the Charizard line, which receives multiple competitive variants including two distinct M Charizard EX printings. This redundancy reflects both the character's sustained market appeal and the set's design philosophy of providing collectors with alternative artwork and potential gameplay applications. The inclusion of M Blastoise EX and Dragonite EX alongside the Charizard variants suggests a deliberate attempt to balance collector demand with competitive viability across multiple archetypes. For serious collectors, Evolutions occupies a peculiar position as a modern product trading explicitly on early-era nostalgia, raising questions about set identity and long-term value retention in an increasingly saturated retrospective market.
Pokemon set pages should explain the release context, show which art and rarity layers matter, and surface where the money and demand are concentrating.
Evolutions sits inside the live pokemon set library. and matters because it combines set identity, chase hierarchy, and live market behavior in one place.

















































































