Pokemon Set Completion Strategy
The Joy of Set Completion
Completing a full Pokemon TCG set is one of the most satisfying achievements in the hobby. Seeing every card from a set organized in a binder represents dedication, knowledge, and careful planning. Whether you are targeting the main set, the full set including secret rares, or the master set with every variant, having a strategy saves time and money.
Understanding Set Composition
Modern Pokemon sets have multiple tiers:
- Main set: Numbered cards from 1 to the official set count (e.g., 1-198). This includes commons, uncommons, holos, and ultra rares.
- Secret rares: Cards numbered beyond the set count (199/198 and above). These include Illustration Rares, Special Art Rares, gold cards, and Hyper Rares.
- Master set: Every possible card including all reverse holos of the main set. This is the completionist goal.
Decide which level of completion you are targeting before you begin, as the cost and difficulty increase dramatically at each tier.
Phase 1: Opening Sealed Product
Start by opening sealed product to build your base of commons, uncommons, and standard rares. For a typical modern set:
- 1 booster box (36 packs): Completes roughly 60-70% of commons and uncommons, plus several ultra rares
- 2 booster boxes: Reaches 85-95% of commons and uncommons
- Elite Trainer Box: Provides 9 packs plus storage supplies
Beyond 2 booster boxes, diminishing returns make additional sealed product less cost-effective. You will start accumulating duplicates faster than filling gaps.
Phase 2: Trading Duplicates
After opening product, you will have duplicates. Trade with friends, local card shop communities, or online trading platforms to swap your extras for cards you need. Trading is the most cost-effective way to fill gaps because you are converting cards you do not need into cards you do.
Online trading communities on Reddit (r/pkmntcgtrades), Discord servers, and Facebook groups facilitate trades for specific cards. Always use tracking and protection when shipping trades.
Phase 3: Buying Singles
For the remaining gaps, buy singles from TCGPlayer, eBay, or your local card shop. This is the most efficient way to complete the last 10-30% of a set. Common and uncommon singles cost $0.10-0.50 each. Holo rares cost $1-5. Ultra rares and secret rares vary widely.
Pro tip: Wait 4-6 weeks after a set releases before buying singles. Prices for most cards drop significantly as supply increases from more product being opened. Chase cards may increase, but everything else typically decreases.
Phase 4: Tackling Secret Rares
If you are going beyond the main set, secret rares require focused single purchases. Rank the secret rares by price and work from cheapest to most expensive. Budget a specific amount per month rather than buying everything at once. The most expensive cards (top SARs, gold cards) can be saved for last, giving the market time to stabilize.
Cost Estimation
For a typical modern Scarlet & Violet set:
- Main set only (commons through ultra rares): $100-200 total (2 boxes + singles)
- Main set + secret rares: $400-800 total depending on chase card prices
- Master set (including all reverse holos): $500-1,200 total
These estimates assume buying 1-2 booster boxes at retail and purchasing remaining singles at market rates.
Using Pokex for Set Tracking
The Pokex set completion tracker is your essential tool for this process. Scan every card as you acquire it and the app automatically tracks your progress, showing which cards you still need and their current market prices. This eliminates manual spreadsheet tracking and prevents accidentally buying duplicates.
The tracker shows:
- Percentage completion for each rarity tier
- List of remaining cards needed with current prices
- Total cost to complete the remaining cards
- Collection value for cards already owned
Tips for Efficiency
- Track everything digitally: Use Pokex to scan and log every card so you always know exactly what you need
- Set price alerts: Watch for deals on cards you need
- Buy in bulk from one seller: Combine multiple singles into one order to save on shipping
- Be patient with chase cards: The most expensive cards in a set often decrease in price over the first few months
- Consider Japanese versions: If you enjoy Japanese cards, the sets are often cheaper to complete than English
- Store completed sets properly: Once finished, protect your work with quality binder pages and storage