Set overview
Pokémon Rumble is worth reviewing through raw price, graded price and break-even grade, not popularity alone. Pokémon Rumble from the Platinum series, released on 2009-12-02, includes 16 official cards and 16 total cards in the source data. Kardive keeps that set identity visible: Platinum series, released 2009-12-02, 16 official cards, 16 total cards listed.
- Lucario #12 - Fighting
- Mew #10 - Psychic
- Mewtwo #9 - Psychic
- Zapdos #8 - Lightning
- Pikachu #7 - Lightning
- Gyarados #6 - Water
- Venusaur #1 - Grass
- Bibarel #16 - Colorless
Card mix and identity
In the visible sample, rarity context includes the cards currently listed; where type data is available, cards include Fighting, Psychic, Lightning and Water. Illustrator data such as the cards currently listed gives the pages more identity than name and number alone.
- Lucario #12
- Mew #10
- Mewtwo #9
- Zapdos #8
- Pikachu #7
- Gyarados #6
- Venusaur #1
- Bibarel #16
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 Pokémon Rumble 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 Pokémon Rumble 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.