Most Valuable Mega Evolution Cards — Top 25 (Market Value)
| Set | Mega Evolution (me1) |
|---|---|
| Year | 2025 |
| Total cards (priced) | 188 |
| Top card | Mega Lucario ex #188 — $266.11 |
| Top 25 combined value | $1689 |
| Price source | TCGPlayer market (live) |

This is the live market-value ranking of every chase card in Mega Evolution (2025), the 188-card Pokémon TCG expansion. Prices update on each PackRip build from TCGPlayer's market feed, so these numbers track the actual ungraded market rather than retail asks. The top 25 alone account for roughly $1689 in combined market value — that's where the pack-opening EV comes from.
Top 25 by TCGPlayer market price
- #1. Mega Lucario ex — Mega Hyper Rare, #188 — $266.11 (1 in 71 per pack)
- #2. Mega Lucario ex — Special Illustration Rare, #179 — $241.56 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #3. Mega Gardevoir ex — Mega Hyper Rare, #187 — $226.48 (1 in 71 per pack)
- #4. Mega Gardevoir ex — Special Illustration Rare, #178 — $202.00 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #5. Mega Venusaur ex — Special Illustration Rare, #177 — $183.67 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #6. Mega Latias ex — Special Illustration Rare, #181 — $96.55 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #7. Lillie's Determination — Special Illustration Rare, #184 — $72.77 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #8. Mega Absol ex — Special Illustration Rare, #180 — $71.73 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #9. Mega Kangaskhan ex — Special Illustration Rare, #182 — $70.52 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #10. Acerola's Mischief — Special Illustration Rare, #183 — $37.71 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #11. Ivysaur — Illustration Rare, #134 — $24.23 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #12. Bulbasaur — Illustration Rare, #133 — $24.08 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #13. Lillie's Determination — Ultra Rare, #169 — $23.93 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #14. Wally's Compassion — Special Illustration Rare, #186 — $23.86 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #15. Vulpix — Illustration Rare, #138 — $19.22 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #16. Lt. Surge's Bargain — Special Illustration Rare, #185 — $19.08 (1 in 357 per pack)
- #17. Marshadow — Illustration Rare, #146 — $19.07 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #18. Mega Lucario ex — Ultra Rare, #160 — $14.67 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #19. Mega Venusaur ex — Ultra Rare, #155 — $14.64 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #20. Steelix — Illustration Rare, #150 — $7.83 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #21. Shuckle — Illustration Rare, #136 — $6.90 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #22. Stufful — Illustration Rare, #154 — $6.29 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #23. Buddy-Buddy Poffin — Ultra Rare, #167 — $5.63 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #24. Night Stretcher — Ultra Rare, #173 — $5.47 (1 in 396 per pack)
- #25. Mega Gardevoir ex — Ultra Rare, #159 — $5.23 (1 in 396 per pack)
How to pull the top card
The single most valuable card in Mega Evolution is Mega Lucario ex at $266.11. You can chase it for free on PackRip's Mega Evolution pack opener — it uses authentic per-rarity pull rates so the simulation produces the same expected-value distribution real boxes do over thousands of openings. The Hunt Pack mode boosts the relevant rarity slot if you want to optimize for this card specifically. Or skip the RNG and buy Mega Lucario ex directly on TCGplayer.
Why these prices change
2025 cards trade on relative supply: PSA pop reports, sealed-product scarcity, character popularity (especially Eeveelutions, starters, and legendary Pokémon), and grading-grade availability. PackRip refreshes its catalog every Phase release, so each new set drop pulls a fresh price snapshot via build-prices.mjs and the rankings reshuffle automatically. Bookmark this page — it stays current.
Why card #1 is worth multiples of card #25
The variance inside a single set's top-25 is itself the most informative number on this page. Mega Lucario ex at $266.11 sits roughly 50.9× the value of the #25 card ($5.23) — and that spread is the rule, not the exception, for 2025 Mega Evolution. The driver is a compounding stack: rarity tier (a Holo Rare is a 1-in-3 pull, a Crystal / Gold Star / Lv.X / Prime / Full Art chase is 1-in-30+), character popularity (Charizard / Pikachu / Eeveelutions trade at multi-x the average for the same rarity tier), illustration quality (full-art and alt-art prints command premiums regardless of competitive viability), and PSA pop-report scarcity (PSA-10 populations for 2025 cards are still expanding, so a low pop today can be 10× the future pop in two years). The top-25 sorts by the joint product of all four, which is why the curve is so steep at the top and flattens by #20+ where the cards are usually Holo Rares of less-popular Pokémon.
Raw vs graded — the multiplier nobody tells beginners
Every price on this page is the raw ungraded NM/M TCGPlayer market median. Graded copies trade at a multiplier on top of that depending on the assigned grade and the population of that grade for the card. The conservative rule of thumb (cross-checked against PSA's own auction history): PSA 9 ≈ 2-3× raw, PSA 10 ≈ 5-10× raw for XY-era cards, with the chase tier (Crystal / Gold Star / Shining / Prime / LEGEND / Full Art) skewing higher because the absolute population is smaller. So Mega Lucario ex at a raw $266.11 typically prices a PSA 9 at $665-798 and a PSA 10 at $1331-2661. BGS 9.5 sits between PSA 9 and PSA 10. The grading-cost economics only work when the raw card is worth roughly 4× the grading fee — for 2025 Mega Evolution that threshold is met by roughly the top 8 cards on this list.
Historical price trend — how the Mega Evolution chase market evolved
The current $266.11 TCGplayer market price on Mega Lucario ex is the end-state of a multi-year re-rating. XY-era cards (including Mega Evolution) remain in the early phase of their market cycle — the original collector cohort is in their teens / early-20s. M-EX chases and Full Arts lead the market, but absolute price levels are below comparable EX or BW chases at the same nominal age. Multi-year appreciation potential is high but the time horizon is longer. Pricing data on PackRip refreshes monthly via the TCGplayer market feed and the snapshot date is visible at the bottom of every card detail page.
Set-specific drivers — why Mega Evolution's top-25 looks the way it does
Mega Evolution (2025) sits in a specific niche within the Pokémon TCG market that shapes which cards land in this top-25 and why. XY-era sets are valued on M Pokémon-EX (Mega Evolution) and Full Art chases. The price level is below comparable older chases because the collector cohort is younger and the supply is higher. Within Mega Evolution specifically, the top-25 reflects this set's particular blend of those factors — high-popularity characters in the chase tier rank disproportionately well, and the deeper into the list you go, the more the ranking reflects pure rarity over character pull.
Condition grading deep-dive — the PSA 10 multiplier
The single biggest determinant of price for any vintage Pokémon card is grading status. PSA 10 ("Gem Mint") copies for 2025 Mega Evolution cards trade at substantial multiples of raw NM/M. The exact multiple depends on the specific card's pop report — common cards with high PSA 10 populations carry small premiums (1.5-2.5×), while chase cards with low PSA 10 populations carry massive premiums (8-15× or more). The threshold question for grading is whether the raw card is worth roughly 4× the grading fee — for Mega Lucario ex at $266.11 raw, grading economics work cleanly. PSA / BGS / CGC are the three main graders; PSA carries the highest market premium for vintage Pokémon, BGS for modern, CGC for anything in between. The grading turnaround time at PSA fluctuates between 30 days (premium service) and 12+ months (bulk service); the bulk service is rarely worth using because the grading fee is small relative to the holding cost of card capital tied up for a year.
Authentication tips before you buy
XY-era Mega Evolution cards (2014+) trade in a mostly safe market for raw purchases under $100. Above that threshold, the standard PSA/BGS slab provenance check applies. For any purchase above $200 raw, the rational path is to buy slabbed (PSA/BGS/CGC) and skip the authentication risk entirely — the grading premium is usually less than the counterfeit risk discount.