Set overview
Best of game is worth reviewing through raw price, graded price and break-even grade, not popularity alone. Best of game from the E-Card series, released on 2002-12-01, includes 9 official cards and 9 total cards in the source data. Kardive keeps that set identity visible: E-Card series, released 2002-12-01, 9 official cards, 9 total cards listed.
- Rocket’s Mewtwo #8 - illustrated by Shin-ichi Yoshida
- Dark Venusaur #7 - illustrated by Shin-ichi Yoshida
- Rocket’s Hitmonchan #9 - illustrated by Ken Sugimori
- Dark Ivysaur #6 - illustrated by Shin-ichi Yoshida
- Rocket’s Sneasel #5 - illustrated by Katsura Tabata
- Rocket’s Scizor #4 - illustrated by K. Hoshiba
- Professor Elm #3 - illustrated by Ken Sugimori
- Hitmonchan #2 - illustrated by Ken Sugimori
Card mix and identity
In the visible sample, rarity context includes the cards currently listed; where type data is available, cards include the cards currently listed. Illustrator data such as Shin-ichi Yoshida, Ken Sugimori and Katsura Tabata gives the pages more identity than name and number alone.
- Rocket’s Mewtwo #8
- Dark Venusaur #7
- Rocket’s Hitmonchan #9
- Dark Ivysaur #6
- Rocket’s Sneasel #5
- Rocket’s Scizor #4
- Professor Elm #3
- Hitmonchan #2
What to analyze
A set page should help users spot top raw cards, top graded cards, best ROI candidates and low-pop or scarcity candidates once live pricing is connected in the Kardive app.
- Raw value leaders
- PSA 10 upside candidates
- Cards that still work in PSA 9
- Cards to track before grading
How this connects to the app
In the full app, users can move from Best of game research to card detail, run an ROI calculation, save a scenario, create a watchlist item or add an owned position to portfolio.
- Open card detail
- Run ROI
- Save scenario
- Track in watchlist
User intent captured
People searching for Best of game grading ideas are usually weighing popularity against financial upside. Kardive keeps those separate, so a popular card still has to pass the fee and risk test.