Twilight Masquerade Set Guide: Full Card List, Chase Cards, Pull Rates, and Sealed Prices
Twilight Masquerade's full card list, the character Special Illustration Rares and Ogerpon line, estimated pull rates, live chase prices led by the Greninja ex, and the sealed board.
By Chase Society Desk
Twilight Masquerade brought the Teal Mask side of Pokemon Scarlet & Violet's Kitakami DLC onto cardboard, a set built around a masked festival, the four faces of Ogerpon, and a run of character Supporters that collectors chase harder than most of the Pokemon. It's remembered for one card in particular: a Greninja ex Special Illustration Rare that outsells everything else in the set by a wide margin.
Twilight Masquerade runs 226 cards, and the full Twilight Masquerade card list with live prices sits on the set page. That's the page to save if you're pricing singles or filling a binder.
From here the guide covers how the numbering is laid out, which cards hold the value, the pull odds, and where the sealed product stands.
Twilight Masquerade at a Glance
- Release date: May 24, 2024, in the Scarlet & Violet (SV) era
- 167 cards in the main numbering, 226 total
- 59 cards above the set number, 168/167 through 226/167
- No Trainer Gallery subset, the chase lives in the Special Illustration Rares
- The return of ACE SPEC cards to the format, and the Ogerpon ex line across its masks
- The headline chase: Greninja ex #214, the Special Illustration Rare
This is the Teal Mask set. Ogerpon and her Teal, Wellspring, Hearthflame, and Cornerstone masks anchor the Pokemon side, the Loyal Three fill out the Kitakami roster, and the human cast of the DLC, Kieran and Carmine among them, get some of the most sought-after cards in the set. For the card list, the two things to watch are the Special Illustration Rares and the ex cards above the set number.
The Twilight Masquerade Card List: How It's Structured
Two blocks, and the money sits in the second one.
The main set, 001 to 167. Commons through the double-rare ex cards, with the ACE SPEC Trainers scattered through and the Ogerpon ex forms leading the holo rares. This is where you build a playset and where most of the packs empty out.
The secret rares, 168 to 226. Everything above the set number: the Illustration Rares, the Special Illustration Rares of both Pokemon and Supporters, the full-art ex cards, and the gold hyper rares at the very top. The Greninja ex and the character cards, Perrin and Carmine among them, all live in this stretch.
Every card across both blocks, priced, is on the full interactive list.
Twilight Masquerade Chase Cards: What's Worth Money
Greninja ex, #214 is the one card here that sits above the rest, and it isn't close. The full-bleed art is the kind of scene the SV Special Illustration Rares built their reputation on, and it's the card people picture when they picture this set.
Perrin, #220 holds second, the standout of the character Special Illustration Rares and one of the set's most-wanted arts.
Below them the set splits between Pokemon and people. Bloodmoon Ursaluna ex, #216 carries the DLC's boss encounter, and Carmine, #217 leads the human cast alongside her brother Kieran. The Eevee and Chansey Illustration Rares round out the Pokemon-art side that collectors reach for on a smaller budget.
The rest of the chase board:
The Twilight Masquerade Character Rares and Ogerpon
Twilight Masquerade doesn't have a Trainer Gallery, so its collecting hook is the Special Illustration Rare slot itself, and this set loaded that slot with people.
Perrin, Carmine, Kieran, and Lana's Aid are the ones to know. The Teal Mask storyline made Kieran and Carmine central characters, and their cards carry the set's narrative the way a Trainer Gallery would in another era. Perrin sits at the top of that group, and the demand for these Supporter arts is a big part of why the set's secret-rare stretch runs deep.
The Ogerpon ex line is the other thread. Teal, Wellspring, Hearthflame, and Cornerstone each got their own card, and the masks give the set a built-in four-part collecting goal that the DLC fans came in already wanting.
Twilight Masquerade Pull Rates (Estimated)
No official odds exist for this set, so the figures below are community-sampled and approximate.
- Double Rare (ex): about 1 in 5 packs
- Illustration Rare: about 1 in 12 packs
- Ultra Rare (full-art ex or Supporter): about 1 in 13 packs
- Special Illustration Rare: about 1 in 40 packs
- Hyper Rare (gold): about 1 in 75 packs
The Special Illustration Rare is the scarce hit, and the Greninja shares that slot with the whole character lineup and the Ogerpon arts. Pulling that one specific card takes real box volume, and the gap between how rarely it comes and how many people want the art is what holds its price up.
Twilight Masquerade Sealed: ETB and Booster Box Prices
The sealed board:
The Elite Trainer Box (ETB) is the unit that changes hands most here, so that row reads the set's demand better than the case-sized listings do. The wider Scarlet & Violet sealed picture is something we track on the market movers board.
Sealed Scarlet & Violet product follows a familiar pattern. A booster box holds 36 packs, and a pack left sealed inside a box sells for more than the same pack cracked out and sold on its own. The market pays a premium for the intact box, and that premium widens as boxes get harder to find.
Why Twilight Masquerade Endures
The value table is only half of what keeps this set in the conversation.
The Teal Mask was the first half of Scarlet & Violet's Kitakami DLC, a small mountain town built on festival and folklore, and Twilight Masquerade is the set that put that story on cards. Ogerpon and her four masks, the Loyal Three, and the human cast of Kieran and Carmine all trace straight back to the game, which is why the character cards land as hard as they do for the people who played it.
The Greninja ex is the object on top of all that. A Kanto starter's final form given one of the era's best full-art scenes, it carries the set's name better than any of the DLC natives could.
Twilight Masquerade sits in the middle of the Scarlet & Violet run, between Temporal Forces and Shrouded Fable, with Stellar Crown close behind. A DLC most fans loved, a slate of character cards nothing else in the era quite matched, and a Greninja that never left the top of the board.
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