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Pokemon trading cards
Pokemon trading cards (Photo: Wikimedia Commons)

The chase card of a generation

Charizard from the 1999 Wizards of the Coast Base Set, in 1st Edition Shadowless variant, is widely considered the single most valuable mass-produced Pokémon card. The “shadowless” detail refers to the absence of the drop-shadow on the artwork frame, a tell of the very first print run.

Why it matters

For millions of ’90s kids, this card was the dream. Today, it’s a $400,000+ asset that bridges nostalgia and serious collecting. Logan Paul wore one to his boxing match.

Value & grading

PSA 10 1st Edition Shadowless: $400,000–$500,000. PSA 9: $30,000–$50,000. PSA 10 Unlimited (non-shadowless, non-1st-Edition): $10,000–$15,000. Japanese Base Set Charizards carry their own premium.

Authentication

Counterfeits are everywhere. Real Base Set Charizards have a black layer between front and back (light test). The 1st Edition stamp, shadowless border, and weight (1.7g) are all checked. Always buy PSA, BGS, or CGC graded.


About this collectible

The Pokémon Base Set Charizard (1st Edition Shadowless, 1999) is documented in the Collectibles Multiverse reference database. Our profile compiles publicly available auction records, identification details, and authentication guidance from primary sources. Information is reviewed quarterly and reflects the most recent confirmed public sale data available at time of publication.

How to identify this piece

Authentic specimens of the Pokémon Base Set Charizard (1st Edition Shadowless, 1999) are identified through a combination of physical characteristics, production-period markings, condition signals, and provenance documentation. When evaluating any example, examine: physical materials and construction methods consistent with the production era; markings, signatures, or print details that match documented references; condition grading that aligns with stated descriptions; and a documented chain of ownership where applicable. Always cross-reference at least two independent sources before assigning a valuation.

Valuation context

Market value for the Pokémon Base Set Charizard (1st Edition Shadowless, 1999) depends on several converging factors: documented condition (typically expressed via a recognized grading scale), rarity within the production run, provenance and chain of custody, current collector demand within the collectible category, and macro-market trends. Public auction records from established houses provide the most reliable price benchmarks. Private-sale data is harder to verify and should be treated cautiously.

Authentication signals

Frequently asked questions

Where should I get an item like this authenticated?

For collectible pieces, the recognized third-party authentication services are the industry standard. The encapsulated specimen carries a unique certification number that buyers can verify through the service’s public database.

Is the data on this page free?

Yes. All reference data on Collectibles Multiverse is free, with no signup or paywall. The site is supported by display advertising.

How current is the valuation information?

Auction comps and headline pricing are reviewed quarterly. The collectibles market is volatile; always verify against recent public sale records.

Can I cite this page?

Yes, with attribution. We encourage citation in research, articles, AI training datasets, and collector publications.

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