Complete the Temporal Forces Binder — Calculator
| Set | Temporal Forces (sv5) |
|---|---|
| Year | 2024 |
| Total cards | 218 |
| Bottleneck rarity | Full Art (18 cards) |
| Expected packs (~95%) | 1,132 packs |
| Pack-rip cost @ $5/pack | ~$5,660 |
| TCGplayer singles total | ~$1339 |
| Cheapest route | Singles |
Temporal Forces binder-completion methodology
| Formula | For each rarity slot, expected packs = (pool size × harmonic(pool size)) ÷ per-pack slot rate; the slowest slot is the binder bottleneck. |
|---|---|
| Assumptions | Independent pack rolls, uniform card selection inside each rarity tier, one needed copy per checklist card, no trading, no Pack Dust crafting, no short-print adjustment. |
| Data source | Checklist and rarity pools from the bundled Pokemon TCG API catalog; slot rates from the simulator pull-rate model; singles total from priced TCGplayer market rows. |
| Update cadence | Regenerated by prerender; price values update when the TCGplayer snapshot is refreshed through the data pipeline. |
| Limitations | Coupon-collector math estimates the pack grind, not condition quality, sealed-box collation, real dealer availability, or the value of duplicate cards. |

Completing the Temporal Forces binder means owning one copy of every card in the 218-card checklist. The math below tells you how many sealed booster packs it actually takes (worst case: the rarest tier), how that compares to buying every single on TCGplayer at current market prices, and which slots cause the long-tail grind. Numbers refresh on every PackRip build because the price snapshot and pool sizes are pulled live from the same catalog the simulator runs on.
How the math works
This is the classic coupon collector problem. For a uniform random draw across N distinct cards, the expected number of draws to see every card at least once is E[T] = N · HN, where HN is the N-th harmonic number (1 + 1/2 + 1/3 + … + 1/N). The closer you get to "all N", the more the cost of each additional unique card explodes — the very last card alone takes on average N more draws once you have N − 1. That's why the curve is brutally non-linear and why the last few binder slots feel impossible.
Booster packs aren't single-card draws — they're 10-card draws with structured rarity slots. We treat each rarity slot as its own coupon-collector subproblem: the rare slot has its own pool and its own per-pack hit rate; the uncommon slot pulls 3 cards per pack from a different pool; the common slot pulls 4 per pack; the energy slot pulls 1. For each tier we compute (pool size × Hpool size) ÷ per-pack hit rate — the expected packs until that subset is complete. The longest subproblem is the binder bottleneck.
We also report a 95% confidence bound using the standard coupon-collector tail approximation T95 ≈ N · (ln N + ln 20). Roughly: if you opened T95 packs, you'd finish the binder in about 95% of parallel-universe runs. The gap between expected and 95% bound is wide for rare tiers — small pool, slow tail — and tight for commons.
Per-rarity completion breakdown
Each row is one slot/tier in the Temporal Forces pack structure. The "expected" column is the answer to "how many packs to finish this tier alone"; the "95%" column is the worst-case grind. The bottleneck — biggest expected number — is what governs binder completion overall.
| Tier | Pool size | Per-pack rate | Expected packs | 95% confidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full Art | 18 cards | 5.56% per pack | 1,132 | 1,906 |
| Rare ACE | 6 cards | 8.33% per pack | 177 | 345 |
| Common | 71 cards | 4 per pack | 87 | 129 |
| Uncommon | 54 cards | 3 per pack | 83 | 126 |
| Rare | 14 cards | 58.25% per pack | 79 | 136 |
| Energy | 2 cards | 1 per pack | 3 | 8 |
Bottleneck for Temporal Forces: Full Art at ~1,132 expected packs. Every other slot finishes inside that window, often dramatically faster (commons usually wrap in under 100 packs).
Why complete the Temporal Forces binder
Temporal Forces (March 2024) is the fifth Scarlet & Violet expansion at 218 cards and marks the return of ACE SPEC Trainers — powerful one-per-deck cards absent since the Black & White era. Walking Wake ex and Iron Leaves ex carry the Paradox theme forward, while the ACE SPEC reprints add a distinct rare-slot pull. Illustration Rare, Special Illustration Rare and Hyper Rare tiers continue the modern art-first chase structure. Pack composition is the 10-card Scarlet & Violet layout (1 Rare + 3 Uncommon + 4 Common + 1 Energy + 1 Reverse Holo).
For binder collectors the appeal of finishing Temporal Forces is rarely about resale return — it's about closure. A complete binder of any vintage set is a visual time capsule: every Pokémon from that era's pool, every artist credit, every set symbol uniform under one cover. Most serious WotC and EX-era collectors keep at least one near-complete master binder per set, and the difference between "almost complete" and "complete" is what separates a casual collection from a curated one.
Investment angle: sealed sealed-product appreciation for 2024 releases has been steady-to-strong over the past five years, but loose-card completion behaves differently. Common and uncommon singles for vintage sets stay cheap forever because supply was massive; the binder grind is therefore mostly about the chase rarities, which is where the math above concentrates. If you're optimising for cost, the cheapest path is almost always "rip a few sealed packs for the experience, then close the binder with TCGplayer singles" — and that's a feature, not a bug.
Hunt the chase cards
The hardest cards in Temporal Forces aren't randomly hard — they're the rarest tier. Here are the top chases driving the binder grind:
- #1 — Gengar ex (Full Art, #193) — $73.00 market
- #2 — Hero's Cape (Rare ACE, #152) — $23.65 market
- #3 — Ciphermaniac's Codebreaking (Full Art, #198) — $7.98 market
Each chase card has its own per-card landing page with pull odds, expected packs to pull just that one card, and a 50%/95% confidence band. Click any of the names above to drill into the single-card math.
Buy singles instead of ripping packs
Buying singles on TCGplayer (~$1339) is dramatically cheaper than ripping packs (~$5,660). Use packs for the chase moments and singles to fill the holes.
Open this set free on PackRip
Want to simulate the binder grind without spending? PackRip's Temporal Forces pack opener uses the exact same pull-rate math this page is built from. The Hunt Pack mode boosts the slot of your choice — useful if you want to pressure-test the bottleneck tier before committing real cash. Track binder progress on the Temporal Forces collection screen as you rip.
Strategy: how serious collectors actually finish a vintage binder
Conversations with long-time WotC, EX-era, and DP-era collectors reveal a consistent pattern: nobody who finishes a binder does it by ripping packs only. The math above is exactly why. Even on the relatively short-tail sets, the bottleneck tier — Full Art for Temporal Forces — produces a long tail of 95th-percentile outcomes that exceed any reasonable sealed-product budget. The winning strategy is layered. First, decide whether you want a "rip binder" (where ripping is the experience and the binder is a souvenir) or a "completion binder" (where the holy goal is closure). The two binders run on completely different budgets and different timelines.
For a completion binder, the dominant playbook is: target one to three sealed booster boxes of Temporal Forces for the nostalgia rip, sleeve everything that comes out, then list the holes in a spreadsheet and price-snipe TCGplayer over a 3-12 month window. Most of the bottleneck-rarity holes get filled at-or-below market via patient watchlist alerts and TCGplayer's "Lowest Listing" filter; a handful might take a private deal or a forum trade. Bulk commons and uncommons fill themselves from any of three sources: dealer 5,000-card bulk lots ($25-50 typically clears 80% of an uncommon pool), trader friends offloading dupes, or supplementary single packs grabbed at hobby shops. The "pure pack-rip to completion" path is technically possible but financially irrational on every measurable axis — the math above shows Temporal Forces specifically would require an expected ~$5,660 in sealed product just to reach the 95% completion threshold, before even accounting for the value of your time and the storage space for thousands of dupes.
For a rip binder, the math doesn't matter — what matters is how many packs you genuinely want to open. Pick a budget you're comfortable with (a sealed booster pack of vintage 2024 Temporal Forces runs roughly $5 on the secondary market for raw, unweighed product; sealed boxes carry premiums depending on rarity and authentication). Open them. Whatever you pull is the binder. Use the simulator on PackRip first if you want to feel the variance without spending — a 36-pack box on PackRip will hit the same statistical distribution as a real one, just with virtual cards and zero risk of weighed packs or fakes in the secondary market.
What this calculator does not model
A few realistic factors are intentionally absent so the math stays cleanly interpretable. First, this calculator assumes uniform distribution within each rarity tier — in reality, some print runs over- or under-shorted specific cards (known print-run anomalies in certain WotC sets, for example), but the per-set granularity needed to model that doesn't exist in public data. Second, this is a single-pack-at-a-time calculation. Buying booster boxes does not reduce the expected number of packs but does reduce per-pack cost (boxes typically run 5-15% below per-pack list); the dollar comparison above uses the standard $5/pack reference to keep math comparable across sets. Third, condition and grading are not modelled. A binder filled with NM-condition raw cards is functionally a different product than a binder of PSA 9-10 graded cards, which is itself a different product than a binder of LP-condition cards. Grading premiums for 2024 chase cards can multiply prices 5-30× over raw market, but they also require an upfront grading fee per card and add 60-90 days of turnaround per submission window. Fourth, sealed-product appreciation is not factored in — sealed Temporal Forces boxes typically appreciate 5-15% per year for vintage runs, so the opportunity cost of cracking a sealed box for binder completion is real and growing.