■ Common questions
Frequently asked about Rising Rivals
Pricing, rarities, release info, and pack value — answered with live market data. Updated daily.
10 questions answered
Q.01
How many cards are in Rising Rivals?
Rising Rivals contains 120 total cards (111 in the printed set). Chase Season currently tracks 120 cards with live pricing data.
Q.02
What is the most valuable card in Rising Rivals?
The top chase in Rising Rivals is Snorlax LV.X (Rare Holo LV.X), currently priced at $797.47 on the holofoil market.
Q.03
When was Rising Rivals released?
Rising Rivals was released in 2009 as part of the Platinum era. It carries the set code RR.
Q.04
How is the Chase Index calculated for Rising Rivals?
The Chase Index is a composite score (0–100) that combines current market price percentile (50%), community chase count (30%), and 7-day view activity (20%). Within Rising Rivals, cards are ranked against each other so local rarity and interest are reflected accurately.
Q.05
Is Rising Rivals rising or falling in value?
Tracked cards in Rising Rivals have moved -18.0% over the past 7 days and — over the past 30 days, based on market prices.
Q.06
What rarities are in Rising Rivals?
Rising Rivals spans 6 distinct rarity tiers across 120 tracked cards. The most common are 33 Common, 32 Uncommon, 29 Rare. The chase tiers include 3 Rare Secrets.
Q.07
Which Pokémon are featured in Rising Rivals?
The headline cards in Rising Rivals feature Snorlax LV.X, Infernape E4 LV.X, Pikachu, Surfing Pikachu, Flying Pikachu, Luxray GL LV.X, alongside other species across the set's 6 rarity tiers. These top the Chase Index ranking inside Rising Rivals based on live market price.
Q.08
What card variants are available in Rising Rivals?
Beyond the base print, Rising Rivals includes 3 chase-tier cards across 1 premium rarity (3 Rare Secrets), plus 106 cards with a reverse-holo variant. Each variant is priced and tracked separately on Chase Season.
Q.09
How does Rising Rivals compare to Platinum?
Rising Rivals (2009) is the Platinum-era expansion that followed Platinum (2009). It tracks 120 cards versus 133 in Platinum, with a top chase of $797.47 against $159.26 in its predecessor.
Q.10
Are Rising Rivals booster packs worth opening?
Pack value in Rising Rivals depends on pull rates and current market prices, neither of which Chase Season predicts. As reference: the set contains 3 chase-tier pulls across 1 premium rarity, led by Snorlax LV.X at $797.47. The average tracked card across Rising Rivals is worth $24.73.