![]() ![]() So far, almost all the sets covered here have been assumed to have a fixed, integer number of each type of card per box on average, though in reality the contents of boxes sometimes varies. For the POP Series, I will use 10 packs instead, since that is what I would estimate the insertion rate for rares to be. I also don’t think there are any arbitrary rarity differences between individual commons and uncommons, though the sample from Youtube yielded a remarkably large number of uncommon Pupitar.įinally, so far I have used a sequence length of 216 packs (1 case) in my tables. ![]() I don’t have any reason to believe that the two Pokémon-ex (Armaldo and Tyranitar) are any rarer than the other five rares. Rares seem to be about 1 in every 10 packs. The ratio of commons to uncommons of 101:20 from POP Series 6 also fits the sample data for POP Series 1 and 2 very well. ![]() The first two POP series apparently use two sheets, one for the commons and uncommons, and one for the rares (including Pokémon-ex), since if you get a rare it is always the second card. Before we get to the next main set, Ex Team Rocket Returns, and to the big question of how rare the Gold Stars actually are, I decided to give a quick look at POP Series 1, since this is the point these packs were released chronologically, and since all the POP Series packs were later available in various retail products.Īs sources, I looked at a few Youtube videos of POP Series 1 and POP Series 2 packs being opened (assuming they can’t be weighed, the bundles of lose packs should be ok as a sample) and compared them with the documented uncut sheet from POP Series 6 shown on Uncut Sheets (it is mislabeled as POP Series 9). ![]()
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