Collector School

How to Decipher Any Pokémon Card 🔍

Every card tells you exactly what it is — if you know where to look. Here’s what all the numbers, symbols and letters mean, from common circles to secret-rare gold stars.

The Card Number — your card’s address

In the bottom corner of every card is a number like this:

025Collector number / 185Cards in the set

Left number — this card’s position in the set. Combined with the set name, it identifies your exact card: “025/185” from Vivid Voltage can only ever be one card.

Right number — the official printed size of the set.

The Secret Rare trick: if the LEFT number is BIGGER than the right (like 210/198), congratulations — you’re holding a Secret Rare! These are extra cards hidden beyond the official set list, and they’re usually the most valuable pulls in any set.

Rarity Symbols — common to super rare

Next to the card number sits a tiny shape. That shape is the rarity ladder:

SymbolRarityWhat it means
Common A black circle. The everyday cards — most cards in any booster pack.
Uncommon A black diamond. A step up — usually stage-1 evolutions and useful trainers.
Rare One black star. Roughly one per booster pack. Holofoil (shiny picture) versions of these are “Holo Rares” and worth more.
★★ Double Rare Two black stars (Scarlet & Violet era). Used for the powerful Pokémon ex cards.
★★ Ultra Rare Two silver/grey stars. Full-art, textured Pokémon ex and Supporter cards.
Illustration Rare One GOLD star. Gorgeous alternate-art cards showing Pokémon in scenic artwork — hugely popular with collectors.
★★ Special Illustration Rare Two GOLD stars. Premium alternate-art ex/Supporter cards — chase cards of the set.
★★★ Hyper Rare Three gold stars — gold-foil cards. Along with older “Rainbow Rares”, these live in Secret-Rare number territory.
PROMO Promo A black star with “PROMO” — from tins, boxes and events, with their own numbering (e.g. SWSH250).
Star colour matters! Black stars = standard rares. Silver stars = Ultra Rares. Gold stars = the premium tiers. Learn the colours and you’ll instantly know what you pulled.

Set Symbols & Set Codes

The same Pikachu can appear in dozens of sets at wildly different values, so the set matters as much as the name.

Set symbol — a small icon printed near the card number (a stylised letter, gem, or emblem). Every expansion has a unique one.

Set code — modern cards (2023+) also print 3-letter codes like SVI (Scarlet & Violet base), PAL (Paldea Evolved), OBF (Obsidian Flames) in the bottom-left. This is the easiest way to name the set exactly.

No symbol at all? — you may be holding a 1999 Base Set card, the very first English print run. Handle with care!

Regulation Marks — the letter in a box

Since 2019, cards carry a letter in a small box on the bottom-left. It has NOTHING to do with rarity — it controls which cards are legal in official Standard tournaments. Older letters “rotate out” each year.

D 2019 (rotated out) E 2020 (rotated out) F 2021–22 (rotated out) G 2023 H 2024 I 2025+
Collector note: rotation affects tournament players, not collectors — a rotated-out card can still be extremely valuable. Check current legality on the official Pokémon TCG site each April.

Vintage Cards — 1st Edition, Shadowless & friends

1st Edition stamp — a round “Edition 1” badge on the left-middle of 1999–2003 cards. First print run = biggest premium. A 1st Edition Base Set Charizard is a five-to-six-figure card in top grade.

Shadowless — early Base Set cards missing the drop-shadow on the right edge of the art box. Rarer than the later “Unlimited” print, and worth much more.

Holo vs Reverse Holo — Holo: the picture is shiny. Reverse Holo: everything EXCEPT the picture is shiny. Same card, different value — holo usually wins for rares.

Condition is king — centering, edges, corners and surface decide the grade. The jump from “played” to PSA 10 can be 10–100× the price on vintage cards.

Japanese Cards — letters instead of symbols

Japanese cards work the same way, but the rarity is printed as LETTER CODES in the bottom corner instead of shapes:

C — Common · U — Uncommon · R — Rare · RR — Double Rare (ex) · SR — Super Rare (full art) · AR — Art Rare · SAR — Special Art Rare · UR — Ultra Rare (gold)

Set codes — Japanese sets use lowercase codes like sv4a or s12a next to the card number, and their numbering (e.g. 025/165) differs from the English release of the same card.

Values differ! — Japanese prints are often cheaper than English for modern chase cards, but can be MORE valuable for vintage (Japanese Base Set, promos). Never assume the English price applies.

Scanner tip: scan a Japanese card and the AI reads the Japanese name, translates it, and shows the closest English print with a link to check sold Japanese listings for the true value.

Spotting Fakes

Before celebrating a valuable find, run these quick checks:

Font & spelling — fakes often use slightly wrong fonts, odd energy symbols, or typos.
The light test — real cards have a thin black/dark layer inside the cardboard; shine a torch through the card — genuine cards block most light, fakes glow.
Colour & texture — washed-out or over-saturated printing, glossy-all-over surfaces, and missing holo texture are red flags.
Compare online — the scanner on this site matches your photo to the official card database — if the artwork or number doesn’t match anything, be suspicious.

Ready to test it? ✨

Grab any card, snap a photo, and let the scanner decode it for you — number, set, rarity and today’s market value.