How Many Packs to Pull Flying Pikachu VMAX from Celebrations

Flying Pikachu VMAX chase quick facts
CardFlying Pikachu VMAX — Celebrations #7
Rarity tierVMAX
Per-pack odds1 in 36
Expected packs to pull36
50% confidence band25 packs
95% confidence band107 packs
TCGplayer market$7.37
Pack-rip break-even1 packs @ $5

Flying Pikachu VMAX chase methodology

How PackRip computes this page
FormulaSpecific-card odds = VMAX tier rate (5.56%) ÷ 2 cards; confidence bands solve 1 - (1 - p)^N.
AssumptionsIndependent pack rolls, uniform selection within the rarity tier, no pity timers, no box mapping, no first-edition/condition split, no duplicate protection.
Data sourceCard identity and rarity from the bundled Pokemon TCG API catalog; pull-rate constants from the live simulator; market price from the bundled TCGplayer snapshot.
Update cadenceRegenerated by prerender; price values update when the TCGplayer snapshot is refreshed through the data pipeline.
LimitationsThe page estimates probability and raw market cost only; it does not model grading premiums, counterfeit risk, sealed-product appreciation, or individual print-run collation.

Flying Pikachu VMAX — Celebrations #7

This page answers exactly one question: how many Celebrations booster packs does it take to pull Flying Pikachu VMAX #7? The numbers below come from the same per-rarity pull-rate model the PackRip Celebrations simulator runs on, mirrored from packGenerator.ts. TCGplayer pricing refreshes every build, so the buy-vs-rip verdict at the bottom reflects current market.

The math: ~1 in 36 per pack

Flying Pikachu VMAX sits in the VMAX rare-slot pool for Celebrations. There are 2 VMAX cards in the Celebrations pool, and the VMAX slot fires with probability 5.56% per pack. Since the slot is split evenly across the 2 cards in that tier, the per-pack chance of pulling this specific card is 1 in 36 — approximately 1 in 36.

Pulls are independent and identically distributed, so the number of packs until you hit Flying Pikachu VMAX follows a geometric distribution with parameter p = 0.027800. The expected number of packs is 1/p — that's ~36 packs on average. But "average" hides huge variance: the median pull lands faster than the mean (~25 packs at 50% confidence), and a long unlucky tail can stretch the wait dramatically. The 95% confidence band — 107 packs — is where 95% of pull-runs finish; the remaining 5% take even longer.

Concretely: if 100 collectors each opened Celebrations packs until they pulled Flying Pikachu VMAX, roughly 50 of them would have it by pack 25, 95 of them would have it by pack 107, and a handful would still be chasing past that. Expected ≠ guaranteed; the geometric distribution is famously long-tailed on the right side.

Confidence bands — packs vs cumulative probability

P(pulled by N packs)Packs neededSealed cost at $5/pack
10%4 packs~$20 sealed cost
25%11 packs~$55 sealed cost
50%25 packs~$125 sealed cost
75%50 packs~$250 sealed cost
90%82 packs~$410 sealed cost
95%107 packs~$535 sealed cost
99%164 packs~$820 sealed cost

Read this table as "what fraction of openers have pulled Flying Pikachu VMAX by pack N?". A 25% band of 11 packs means a quarter of openers hit it inside that window; 99% means almost everyone has hit it by pack 164. The dollar column anchors the variance to real-world sealed-pack cost at $5/pack.

Cheaper to buy Flying Pikachu VMAX as a single?

Buying Flying Pikachu VMAX as a single on TCGplayer (~$7.37) is dramatically cheaper than chasing it through packs — the expected pack-rip cost is roughly $180, well above the market price.

Pack-rip expected dollar cost for this specific card: ~$180 at $5 per Celebrations pack. Compare to $7.37 for the single on TCGplayer (Unlimited / non-graded copy at current market). The single buy obviously delivers exactly this card; the pack-rip approach delivers Flying Pikachu VMAX plus the remaining 9 cards in every pack along the way — which is why the EV calculator at /ev/cel25 spreads the cost across the whole pack contents instead of pinning it to one card.

About Flying Pikachu VMAX (Celebrations)

Flying Pikachu VMAX is a VMAX card from Celebrations, the 2021 Pokémon TCG expansion. Celebrations (October 2021) is the 25th-anniversary set at 25 cards, paired with a 25-card Classic Collection subset of iconic reprints. The main set features modern prints of legendary Pokémon (Ho-Oh, Lugia, Zacian/Zamazenta V/VMAX), while the Classic Collection delivers the real nostalgia: Base Set Charizard, Gold Star Umbreon and Espeon, _Imakuni?_, Here Comes Team Rocket and other historic cards reprinted with their original artwork and a holo-foil "25" stamp. PackRip merges the Classic Collection straight into the pull pool — the way the real Celebrations packs delivered them — as the set's premium chase tier. Pack composition is a shorter celebration pack layout; PackRip models the standard modern rare slot.

This specific card ranks as one of the top-3 most valuable pulls in Celebrations by TCGplayer market value, which is part of why the chase math is what it is — high market value tends to track with rarity-tier depth, since lower pool sizes concentrate value into fewer cards. The complete top-25 Celebrations ranking shows where Flying Pikachu VMAX sits relative to the rest of the chase pool.

Pull odds in context

For reference, a "1 in 36" pull is roughly comparable to a moderate chase — you should expect to crack a couple of boxes. The variance is the killer: any one pack could be the one. The simulation on PackRip's Celebrations opener uses the same exact RNG model, so you can stress-test the wait curve without spending real money.

Related chases

Open Celebrations free

Rip Celebrations packs free on PackRip's simulator with the same per-rarity pull rates this page is built from. The Hunt Pack mode boosts the VMAX slot if you specifically want to optimise for Flying Pikachu VMAX-tier pulls. Coin economy is virtual — no real money on the line.

Strategy: optimising the Flying Pikachu VMAX chase

Every experienced Celebrations hunter eventually picks one of three approaches for a specific chase card. The cheapest is the snipe: skip pack-ripping entirely, set a TCGplayer alert at or below the current $7.37 market, and wait for a motivated seller. This is the route most efficient-frontier collectors take when the chase is locked behind a deep rarity tier — and the math above shows why. The expected pack-rip cost ($180) is typically multiples of the single price, and the variance on that expectation is wide enough that a single bad streak can blow past the 95% confidence bound. The single buy is dollar-for-dollar cheaper and emotionally cheaper too — no more refreshing pack-pull videos at 3am.

The middle path is the box-rip-then-snipe: open a sealed booster box of Celebrations (typically 36 packs for vintage sets), enjoy the experience, then if you didn't hit Flying Pikachu VMAX in the box, buy the single for $7.37. A 36-pack box delivers a probability of 1 − (1 − p)36 ≈ 63.8% of pulling Flying Pikachu VMAX at least once, where p is the per-pack hit rate of 0.027800. So a sealed box gives you roughly a 64% chance of hitting this card "for free" alongside the rest of the box contents, plus the rip experience. If you miss, you backstop by buying the single — total worst-case cost is the box price plus the single. Most rational hobbyists end here.

The expensive path is pure-rip-to-pull: keep opening packs until Flying Pikachu VMAX appears. The expected total cost is ~$180, but the 95th percentile pushes that to ~$535. Almost nobody who does this comes out ahead financially — but it produces the binder story, the YouTube content, and the cumulative pulls of the entire pack contents along the way. If your real goal is collecting all of Celebrations, not just acquiring Flying Pikachu VMAX, the pure-rip path has an internal logic the singles path doesn't.

Variance is the entire story

Here's a concrete illustration of how wild the geometric distribution gets at low p. Consider 10 hypothetical openers all chasing Flying Pikachu VMAX from Celebrations. Mathematically, you'd expect their results to cluster near the 36-pack expectation — but they won't. Roughly 5 will pull Flying Pikachu VMAX within the first 25 packs and feel lucky. Roughly 3 will pull between 25 and 36 packs and feel "about average". And roughly 2 will be still pulling past pack 36, with one of them potentially stretching past the 95% bound of 107. The unlucky ones will swear the simulator is rigged, the rates are wrong, or that they have terrible RNG — but the math says exactly this distribution should happen every time. The geometric distribution has no memory: each pack is an independent draw, and a 100-pack dry streak does not increase the odds of the next pack hitting.

How Flying Pikachu VMAX compares to the broader Celebrations chase pool

Flying Pikachu VMAX sits in the VMAX tier of Celebrations's rare-slot pool. 2 cards share this tier, and the tier itself fires roughly 5.56% of the time per pack. That means the per-pack chance of pulling any VMAX card (not just Flying Pikachu VMAX) is 5.56%, which makes the expected wait for any VMAX card much shorter than the wait for this specific one. Pull-rate intuition: a single chase from a 6-card tier is 6× rarer than the tier itself. The deeper the pool, the longer the chase. This is also why "wide" sets with many chase cards in a single tier feel grindier per individual card despite the tier hit rate being identical — a thicker tier dilutes each card's specific share.

If your real goal is "any chase card from Celebrations" rather than "Flying Pikachu VMAX specifically", the math gets dramatically friendlier — the wait drops to ~18 packs on average for the tier as a whole. Most binder collectors approach it this way: chase the tier broadly across multiple sets, accept whatever pulls, and snipe the specific holes via TCGplayer later. Targeting one card from a thick tier is the most expensive way to play the chase, and Flying Pikachu VMAX is no exception.