Pokémon
151
Card List
S C A R L E T & V I O L E T
Twilight Masquerade is filled with eerie charm and some of the most beautiful trainer cards ever released. Scroll down for the full visual card list, free checklist, binder placeholders, pull rates, and more.
Did you know? Ogerpon is the first Legendary Pokémon to debut with a total of 12 ex cards in a single set — thanks to her four unique masks.
Total
Cards
207
Set
Symbol
MEW
Visual Card List

Mastering This Set?
Here’s how we stay on top of Master Sets without losing our minds:
✔ Our FREE "Front-of-Binder" Checklist to track all 373 cards (including all variations) in Twilight Masquerade
✔ Simple and beautiful Binder Placeholders that keep your pages clean and let you spot missing cards—without cluttered proxy cards
Shop the full placeholder set →
Twilight Masquerade Chase Cards
Tap to reveal just some the most sought-after hits from the Twilight Masquerade set.












S E E W H A T T H E Y ’ R E W O R T H ↓

Rarer than Prior Sets

Rarer than Prior Sets

Rarer than Prior Sets

Same as Previous Sets

Same as Previous Sets
Chance of pulling at least one
HR, SIR, IR, UR, or AS in a pack:
What are the Pull Rates?
Pull rates in Twilight Masquerade line up pretty closely with what we saw in Temporal Forces — with one notable change.
Those amazing Hyper Rares (gold cards) are now tougher to pull.
The Pokémon Company doesn’t officially release pull rates for English sets, so we’re very lucky as a community to have strong data compiled by the amazing folks at TCGplayer. What they saw from opening over 8,000 booster packs, is that most rarities stayed pretty consistent, but Hyper Rares are now only showing up roughly once in every 146 packs. That’s slightly rarer than Temporal Forces (1 in 139), and a huge jump from sets like Paradox Rift (1 in 82) or Obsidian Flames, where gold cards were practically showing up every other box.
Did We Get Any Hits in our Twilight Masquerade Elite Trainer Box?
We cracked open every pack inside the Twilight Masquerade ETB (plus a booster bundle) and we were honestly surprised by what showed up… but mostly by what didn’t. Out of 15 packs, we pulled four hits — nothing crazy, although the pop of color those hot pink ACE specs add to our binders is refreshing.
Could be the pull rates, or just our luck, but our opinion:
If there’s a specific card you’re chasing (looking at you, Eevee SIR), picking up singles might be the smarter move for this set.
But honestly, who are we to tell you not to rip those packs?
Is Twilight Masquerade Worth it?
TL;DR: If you like stunning artwork and solid playable cards, Twilight Masquerade is absolutely worth a few packs (or a bundle... or two)!
Between Perrin and her Hisuian Growlithe (one of the most charming match cards maybe ever), Carmine’s striking trainer card, and the solid return of Greninja EX, there’s a lot to be excited about here. And of course, this is the first time Ogerpon — with multiple masks and some strong card art to match - and the others from Kitikami appear in the TCG.
Pull rates for the higher rarities are definitely tougher than in earlier sets and we didn’t get lucky, but there’s still a good balance of strong hits and some seriously well-designed trainer cards that will keep you chasing. And worse case, you can always pick up your faves as singles.