Secluded Springs

Released 28/08/2025 105 cards 1 packs
About the Secluded Springs set

Secluded Springs has 105 cards. Browse every card below or filter by rarity, and see which packs you need to open.

Packs in this set

Cards in this set

105 cards

What This Set Actually Contains

This page covers one Pokémon TCG Pocket set on its own: its release date, which series it belongs to, its total card count, and the full card list filterable by rarity, element, or card type. Every card shown here links straight into its own detail page rather than stopping at a thumbnail, so checking a specific card's attacks or pull odds is one click away instead of a separate search.

A set's release date also tells you something practical: older sets have had more time for Pack Points to accumulate against them, which makes their rarer cards realistically easier to redeem outright even if pulling them stays just as unlikely as it was on release day.

The Packs Inside This Set

Sets are opened through one or more pack variants, not through the set itself directly, and each pack variant listed on this page carries its own separate pull-rate table — two packs from the same set can have completely different odds for the same rarity tier, and a card locked to one pack variant will never appear from the others no matter how many are opened. This page lists every pack tied to this set alongside its own odds, so choosing between them is a comparison you can actually make here rather than something you have to piece together from separate pages.

Opening any pack, from any variant, always earns 5 Pack Points regardless of what's pulled — but those points only count toward that specific pack's own redemption pool, not the set as a whole, so points earned from one pack variant in this set can't be spent redeeming a card locked to a different pack variant in the same set.

Pull Odds, Rolled Up for This Set

Pull odds work per slot inside a pack, not per card: the first three cards are always Common, and any chance at a rarer pull only exists in slot 4 and slot 5, with slot 5 running at roughly four times the odds slot 4 gets for the same rarity tier. This page rolls those per-slot numbers up into a set-level view, gathered from every pack variant this set has, so you can compare rarity chances across the whole set instead of opening each pack's page separately to piece the picture together.

That rolled-up view is a convenience layer over the same underlying per-slot data used on individual card pages — if a specific card's exact odds matter more than the set-wide picture, its own card page has the precise slot-by-slot breakdown for just that card.

Rarity Breakdown and What's Worth Chasing

This page also totals up how many cards in the set fall into each rarity tier, from Common through Crown Rare, so you can see the actual shape of the set — how top-heavy or how spread out its rare cards are — without counting a card grid by hand. The set's standout cards, meaning its higher rarity tiers, are called out directly rather than left for you to hunt through the full list.

For navigating between sets, this page links to the set released immediately before and immediately after this one in the overall timeline, so moving through set history in order doesn't require going back to the full set list every time.

Frequently asked questions

How many cards are actually in this set?

The total card count is shown at the top of this page and reflects a direct count of the cards belonging to this set, along with a rarity-tier breakdown further down showing how many Common, Uncommon, Rare, and higher-tier cards make up that total.

Which pack should I open to get this set's best cards?

Compare the pack variants listed on this page directly — each carries its own pull-rate table, and a card locked to one pack variant will never drop from another, even within the same set. The odds shown per pack here are what decide which one is actually worth opening for a given card, not the set's name alone.

Are Promo sets opened the same way as this one?

No. Regular sets like this one are opened through a purchasable pack with its own pull-rate table. Promo sets don't have a pack to buy at all — their cards come from missions, research tasks, or event rewards instead, so pull-odds tools don't apply to them.

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