I cracked a Pack Hourglass at 2:07 a.m. and the glow of the screen made the Sprigatito art feel like a small, urgent secret. For a second I thought I’d pulled the one card that changes a weekend—then the pack shuffled it away. You know that twitch: you want the chase, and you want to know where to aim.
I’ve opened more digital boosters than I’ll admit, and I’ve tracked leaks, promos, and the odd seed planted by The Pokémon Company. I’ll walk you through what matters in the Paldean Wonders expansion, where the chase cards hide, and which pulls are truly worth your Pack Hourglasses. Read this like a field report from someone who buys packs, tests decks, and argues with store owners about rarity.
The line at my local card shop smelled of fresh print — Pokemon TCG Pocket Paldean Wonders Full Card List
Release date: February 26, 2026. This set drops into Pokemon TCG Pocket just before the Pokemon Presents 2026 livestream, and it brings Gen 9 Pokémon to the Pocket client with a single booster pack in the series—similar to the Fantastical Parade expansion. If you collect digital TCG, that single-pack approach concentrates the chase into one pool, which raises both excitement and the fear of missing out.
The Paldean Wonders roster includes the Gen 9 starters—Sprigatito, Fuecoco, and Quaxly—plus a smattering of high-rarity ex cards, Art Rares, and new Trainer support tied to the Paldean region. You obtain these by opening booster packs with Pack Hourglasses inside Pokemon TCG Pocket; the chase list reads like a treasure map.
I’ve preserved the full card table below so you can scan HP, Stage, attacks, and rarity at a glance. Take your time—some of these pulls will change how you build decks; others are pure collector dopamine.
| Card | Type | Rarity | Card Details |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() Sprigatito |
Grass | Common | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Leafage – 20 damage Weakness: Fire +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
![]() Fuecoco |
Fire | Common | HP: 70 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Circular Singing – 30 damage Weakness: Water +20 Retreat Cost: 2 Colorless |
![]() Gholdengo ex |
Metal | Double Rare (ex) | HP: 150 Stage: Stage 1 (ex) Ability: Coin Bonus Attack: Spreading Rush – 50× damage This attack does 50 damage for each Energy attached. Weakness: Fire +20 Retreat Cost: 2 Colorless |
![]() Maushold |
Colorless | Art Rare | HP: 60 Stage: Stage 1 Ability: — Attack: Family Attack – 70× damage This attack does 70 damage for each Maushold in play. Weakness: Fighting +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
![]() Meowscarada ex |
Grass | Double Rare (ex) | HP: 310 Stage: Stage 2 (ex) Ability: Bouquet Magic Attack: Solar Beam – 120 damage Weakness: Fire +30 Retreat Cost: 2 Colorless |
![]() Quaxly |
Water | Common | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Splashing Dodge – 10 damage Weakness: Lightning +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
![]() Pawmi |
Lightning | Common | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Zap Kick – 20 damage Weakness: Fighting +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
![]() Smoliv |
Grass | Common | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Absorb – 20 damage Heal 10 damage from this Pokémon. Weakness: Fire +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
![]() Fidough |
Psychic | Common | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Rage Kick – 20 damage Weakness: Metal +20 Retreat Cost: 2 Colorless |
![]() Paldean Wooper |
Darkness | Common | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Flip – 40 damage Weakness: Grass +20 Retreat Cost: 2 Colorless |
![]() Klawf |
Fighting | Rare | HP: 100 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Adrenaline Hammer – 70 damage Weakness: Grass +20 Retreat Cost: 3 Colorless |
![]() Ceruledge |
Psychic | Rare | HP: 110 Stage: Stage 1 Ability: — Attack: Fighting Sword – 70+ damage This attack does 30 more damage if a basic Energy is attached. Weakness: Darkness +20 Retreat Cost: 2 Colorless |
![]() Tinkatink |
Metal | Common | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Beat – 30 damage Weakness: Fire +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
![]() Arven |
Trainer (Supporter) | Uncommon | Search your deck for an Item card and a Pokémon Tool card, reveal them, and put them into your hand. Then, shuffle your deck. |
![]() Mesagoza |
Trainer (Stadium) | Uncommon | Once during each player’s turn, that player may flip a coin. If heads, they search their deck for a Basic Pokémon, reveal it, and put it into their hand. Then, shuffle their deck. |
![]() Nemona |
Trainer (Supporter) | Uncommon | Draw 3 cards. |
![]() Charcadet (Promo B) |
Fire | Art Rare (Promo) | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Punch – 20 damage Weakness: Water +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
![]() Pawmi (Promo B) |
Lightning | Common (Promo) | HP: 60 Stage: Basic Ability: — Attack: Random Spark – 20 damage This attack also does 10 damage to 1 of your opponent’s Benched Pokémon. Weakness: Fighting +20 Retreat Cost: 1 Colorless |
When will the Paldean Wonders Expansion be released in Pokemon TCG Pocket?
Official drop: February 26, 2026. If you’re timing your Pack Hourglasses or planning a weekend of openings, that date is the one to circle. Pokemon Presents often follows with events tied to big drops, so expect Pocket-specific promos around that window.
How many cards will the Pokemon TCG Pocket Paldean Wonders Expansion have?
The Pocket-format expansion mirrors the single-booster approach seen in Fantastical Parade. The current setlist visible in Pocket and community leaks suggests a roster in the ballpark of 100+ cards, with a mix of commons, rares, Art Rares, and several ex (double-rare) cards. I’ll be watching for official updates from The Pokémon Company and the Pocket client.
Will there be step-up battles for the Paldean Wonders Expansion?
Yes—Paldean Wonders will include Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced, and Expert step-up battles inside Pokemon TCG Pocket. These events are the best place to test new builds, earn event currency, and chase limited-time rewards tied to the expansion and the Pokemon 30th anniversary programming.
What to chase first: prioritize ex cards and Art Rares if you want meta impact or resale value; pick promo Art Rares for collection aesthetics. Trainer cards like Arven and Stadiums such as Mesagoza can shift deck construction quietly, so keep a copy if you opened one early in your runs.
If you follow community traders on Discord, Reddit, or the Pocket in-app channels, you’ll see prices quoted in USD—remember to convert to EUR where relevant when you trade or buy. Think of each booster as a crowded subway where the rarest rider might be standing in the corner; patience and pattern recognition pay off.
I’ll update this list as more cards surface and as The Pokémon Company publishes confirmed spoilers and event details. Are you chasing the art rares, the ex cards, or just the nostalgic thrill of a perfect pull?

















