Is Pokemon 151 Worth Opening in Australia?

Pokemon Pokemon 151 Australia: pull rates, top cards, box expected value in AUD, and whether buying singles is smarter.

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Quick Answer

Pokemon 151 is the most consistently in-demand modern Pokemon set in Australia. Released in September 2023, it covers all 151 original Kanto Pokemon in updated SV-era card design. The combination of nostalgia for the originals and modern card treatments has kept secondary market prices elevated long after its initial release window. Check current AUD singles prices at /cards/pokemon and run your specific purchase price through the EV Calculator at /tools before committing to any sealed product.

What Is in Pokemon 151?

Pokemon 151 is a special set numbered 1 through 165, covering all 151 original Kanto Pokemon. Unlike standard sets, 151 is explicitly a collector and nostalgia product, meaning demand comes from collectors who want the full set, competitive players who want specific ex cards, and casual fans who grew up with the original 151.

Set size: Standard SV-era structure with regular cards, Illustration Rares, Special Illustration Rares, and Hyper Rares.

Packs per box: 36 packs per standard booster box, 10 cards per pack.

Pull structure: Approximately one Ultra Rare per two packs on average. Special Illustration Rares appear roughly once per case of six boxes under standard pull rates, though set-specific guarantees vary.

Top Cards to Know

Mew ex Special Illustration Rare is the headline card. Charizard ex SIR (distinct from the Obsidian Flames version) drives strong demand. Alakazam ex SIR and Giovanni's Charisma SIR are top collector targets. The Trainer Gallery-style subset of original Kanto Pokemon adds broad collector appeal beyond the individual chase cards.

For all current AUD prices on Pokemon 151 singles, check /cards/pokemon. Prices update from live eBay AU market data.

Pull Rates and What to Expect

Standard SV-era pull rates apply to this set. From a 36-pack booster box expect roughly 18 Ultra Rare cards. The value of those 18 cards depends entirely on how many are high-demand chase cards versus lower-tier ex cards that sell for AU$5 to AU$15 each.

Most boxes return 60 to 85 percent of retail in singles value on average. To hit full cost recovery you need at least one Special Illustration Rare from the high-demand tier. The EV Calculator at /tools uses current AUD prices to give you an accurate verdict for your specific purchase price.

Should You Open or Buy Singles?

Open if: you enjoy the opening experience, the EV Calculator shows positive or borderline return at your purchase price, you want to build across the full set, or you are playing competitive formats using this set's cards.

Buy singles if: you want specific chase cards from Pokemon 151. The Australian singles market is active and most cards are available as direct singles through eBay AU. Targeting your one or two must-have cards directly is almost always cheaper than opening boxes hoping to pull them.

The Australian TCG community has well-developed single-card selling networks. Use /market to see current price trends before buying or selling specific cards.

Australian Market Context

Australian buyers pay AU$130 to AU$200 for standard SV booster boxes at retail, with secondary market prices varying by set age and demand. Amazon AU stocks most recent Pokemon sets with Prime delivery. Local game stores may offer event pricing or bundle deals worth checking before committing to online retail.

For accurate current pricing, always check eBay AU sold listings rather than asking prices. Sold prices reflect what buyers are actually paying in the Australian market today. The gap between asking price and sold price on older sets can be significant.

How Pokemon 151 Fits the Broader SV Collection

The Scarlet and Violet era is designed as a connected series where each set builds on shared mechanics while introducing new features. Pokemon 151 sits within this progression, which means cards from this set interact with and complement cards from surrounding sets. If you are building a competitive collection across the full SV era, understanding where Pokemon 151 sits in the timeline affects which cards are worth prioritising now versus which will hold relevance into future sets.

For competitive play, the rotation schedule determines how long Pokemon 151 cards remain legal in the Standard format. Check the current rotation status at the time of purchase. Cards that are approaching rotation are typically declining in competitive value while cards that were recently rotated out drop sharply and may represent collector value at reduced prices.

The C3 Pokemon hub at /cards/pokemon shows current AUD pricing across all SV era sets. Use it to compare prices across sets when deciding where to focus your collection budget.

The C3 Take

Every Pokemon set EV question comes down to the same two numbers: what are the top cards worth today, and what are the odds of pulling them? Both shift constantly. A set that looked poor value six months ago may now be positive EV if competitive demand has driven prices up. Check /cards/pokemon for live prices and run the EV Calculator before every purchase. Hype and gut feel are not substitutes for current AU market data.

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