Bagaimana Kita Bisa Memperbaiki Krisis Harga Ascended Heroes yang Sedang Berlangsung di Pokémon TCG?
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If you, like me, are looking to complete your Pokémon TCG binder, we may have had a similar experience recently. A few weeks ago, I walked into my local card store, hoping that I’d timed it just right so that I’d catch my friends doing a restock of Ascended Heroes Pokémon products.
Usually, they put one or two packs behind the counter for me as a favour. So I waltz in, breezing past the crowds to the front, where I’m met with a shrug.
Nothing.
If you, like me, have walked into a store hoping to pick up an Ascended Heroes Elite Trainer Box (ETB) at its $49.99 MSRP, you’ve probably been met with a similar scenario: A despondent worker. An empty shelf. Crowds of resellers swarming the place.
Ascended Heroes Price Crisis Is Completely Unsustainable
Since its debut at the start of 2026, the Mega Evolution - Ascended Heroes Pokémon TCG expansion has undergone somewhat of an evolution itself. First, a simple, highly anticipated set that included over 290 cards - one of the largest English Pokémon TCG expansions ever released. Now, it’s a full-blown phenomenon that shows no signs of slowing down.
According to the latest TCGplayer data, sealed Ascended Heroes ETB Cases are currently moving for a staggering $1,762.61. Sure, you get 10 ETBs, but for Trainers doing the math at home, that places individual ETBs just over $176 - more than triple their retail value just months after launch.
But why? Why has this expansion taken off, over something like Prismatic Evolutions or Perfect Order? The answer might be more complicated than you think.
Let’s start with the easy answer. It’s a great expansion. With Mega Evolutions returning in force and Special Illustration Rares hot on the market, Ascended Heroes has some of the best chase cards out there right now.
While Prismatic Evolutions suffered somewhat from frustrating pull rates for top-tier hits, Ascended Heroes has a decent pull rate that makes ‘just one more pack’ inevitable. Take Double Rares for example - the overall hit rate for one is a healthy 1 in 5 packs.
The second easy answer is the state of the third party resell market. The expansion features a staggering 22 Special Illustration Rares (SIRs). While the total hit rate for an SIR is roughly 1 in 70 packs, the math for a specific card is terrifying.
According to TCGplayer’s Pull Rate Guide, your odds of pulling a specific chase like the SIR Mega Gengar ex are approximately 1 in 1,533 packs (with some community data suggesting it's as low as 1 in 2,002). When a single Mega Gengar ex SIR goes for highs of $1,279.54 on TCGPlayer, the idea that one card could make back your entire collection becomes an alluring prospect.
It’s not even just the ETBs that have seen price spikes. When people are paying nearly $17 per pack just for the chance to see a Mega Evolution's jagged energy lines, the fundamental rules of new set depreciation start to break down.
So “hype” is the easy answer. But what’s the complicated answer to why Ascended Heroes' price is soaring right now?
The answer is inertia.
At $1,762.61 per case, investors are effectively baking in three years of organic growth into a brand-new set. Financially, this makes little sense, yet the demand persists. The "Destined Rivals" effect is also in play - we’ve seen recent sets vanish from retail shelves after only three months of availability. If Ascended Heroes follows that trajectory, the window to find MSRP product at big-box retailers is closing fast. At this point, the secondary market sets the price, and people want a pay day.
So, the next question is inevitably - ‘what can we do?’. And that answer, unfortunately, is not much.
Immediately, you probably think ‘well, we just need to stop buying it until reprints become available’. Conventional wisdom suggests that more product equals lower prices. But do you remember when The Pokémon Company printed and restocked Prismatic Evolutions for an entire year, which held the price down from $100-$115 an ETB? As soon as there was a break in the reprint, ETBs went straight back up to $200. While a reprint may curb the price spikes, it doesn’t solve the issue.
The reality is that upcoming Ascended Heroes Booster Bundles, releasing April 24, 2026, are likely to be eaten up by the market instantly with the demand we’ve seen, in turn injecting the market with high-value cards.
In a cyclical pattern we’ve seen with previous God Tier sets, like Prismatic Evolutions, it’s likely that prices will yo-yo between 1.25x and 3x MSRP for the next two years as waves of reprints hit, only to skyrocket once the printing presses finally stop.
Will upcoming products have the same impact? Only time will tell.
"We will then have someone else make a similar post about this a few months from now, asking why AH prices haven't gone down despite the release of different products," notes one cynical yet accurate market observer over on r/PokeInvesting.
But what if you’re a fan actually looking to play the game, or complete a binder? There is a small glimmer of hope. Historically, when high-demand sets see a surge in "ripping," the market becomes flooded with single cards. We expect a "Prismatic-style" dip in singles prices - specifically for Illustration Rares - as more Booster Bundles circulate.
For the average fan, the advice is simple. Hold on. If Pokémon TCG does see a 2021-style crash where speculators exit, be ready to buy the dip. But as long as the Ascended Heroes hype continues to dominate the cultural conversation, the resale market for Ascended Heroes looks like it’s headed for the moon - with or without us.
Sara Heritage is a freelance journalist for IGN, specialising in Pokémon TCG. When she's not gaming, you’ll probably find her building yet another LEGO set she absolutely did not need, or chaining ranked matches in Pokémon Champions.
Sumber: IGN
