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The expansion symbol resembles a Vileplume and it has 64 cards. Unlike base, it had 2 preconstructed decks. Some cards featured were Pikachu, Gloom, and Victreebel. After being a very small set in Japan, the English set started the trend of having alternate holographic and non-holographic editions of rare cards, effectively doubling the number of rares in the set. Jungle was the second expansion set in the United States, adding new Pokémon and one Trainer to the bunch, and was released on June 16, 1999. Certain "4th issue" cards have slightly brighter color than the other prints. These cards are known as "4th issue" cards, and are also rarer than the "unlimited" print. Cards printed right before the release of Base Set 2 have the year 2000 included in their copyright notices. Since not many prints were printed as "shadowless", these cards are rarer than the "unlimited" print. Because of this, these cards are known as "shadowless" cards among collectors. These early prints are generally brighter in color, use a thinner font, have the year 1999 appear twice in the copyright notice and lack the shadow around the pictures. The "1st issue" print and a few of the following ("2nd issue") prints have a slightly different design than the standard "unlimited" ("3rd issue") prints. This set also had a 2-player starter set, containing two half-sized decks with no intended strategy and a play mat. The set's four main theme decks were based on four different strategies (offensive, defensive, tactic and speed). Some of the more popular examples are Charizard, Blastoise, Venusaur and Pikachu. The set is one of the more well-rounded sets available, with a mixed amount of Pokémon of all types, and includes only Pokémon from the original 150. The set also contained Double Colorless Energy, the first special Energy card. It is one of few sets to include Fighting, Fire, Grass, Lightning, Psychic and Water Energy cards, now commonly known as basic Energy cards. It is the only set and expansion so far not to have a set logo or symbol (with the exception of the error "no symbol" Jungle set cards). It was released in Japan on October 20, 1996, (one month after Bandai Pokemon Carddass 100 Pocket Monster Part 1 Green & Part 2 Red, September 1996), and in the United States on January 9, 1999. The Base Set, ( Japanese: 第1弾スターターパック & 第1弾拡張パック 1st Starter & Expansion Pack) is the name given to the original core release of cards and Theme Decks for the Pokémon Trading Card Game. This Pokémon pack consists of 24 Base Set shadowless cards and an instruction manual. The 1998 Pokémon Demo Game Pack was the earliest Pokémon card pack to be produced and released in the English Pokémon TCG and served as the first introduction to Pokémon cards in the United States.
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Pokemon star energy series#
When the series first launched in English in late 1998, Wizards of the Coast handled publishing.įirst Generation Sets 1998 Pokémon Demo Game Plastic Pack
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2.2.2 Diamond and Pearl – Mysterious Treasures.1.1.1 1998 Pokémon Demo Game Plastic Pack.If you find this in your collection, you're quids in. Still, 'significantly less' in this context still means almost $500 more than the second most valuable Pokémon card. The ones you see in the news are often PSA 9 or 10, but most don't tend to get that grade, meaning most sell for significantly less. While first editions can sell for thousands more than second editions, their value more depends on the quality and PSA-grading of the card. There are two printed versions of Shadowless cards – first editions can be identified by the First Edition symbol under the bottom left corner of the art, while second editions, while still Shadowless, do not have the same mark. This is the one that regularly makes the news, with some auctions for it going up into the hundreds of thousands for a verified pristine copy. Of course, there's no Pokémon card that is more sought-after than a shadowless Base Set Charizard. #1 – Base Set Charizard (Shadowless Holo), $2032 This is a first edition print, identifiable by the stamp to the.