Why open Evolving Skies in the simulator?
Evolving Skies is fun to open virtually because the set has a strong identity around Eeveelutions and high-interest VMAX cards, making each reveal easy to follow even without looking only at rarity numbers.
Pokémon set simulator
Evolving Skies is a Sword & Shield Pokémon TCG set known in the card list for Eeveelution V and VMAX cards, Dragon-type favourites, and a large range of ultra-rare style pulls. With 237 cards and 9 rarity groups, it remains one of the most recognisable older sets in the simulator.
Evolving Skies is a Sword & Shield Pokémon TCG set known in the card list for Eeveelution V and VMAX cards, Dragon-type favourites, and a large range of ultra-rare style pulls. With 237 cards and 9 rarity groups, it remains one of the most recognisable older sets in the simulator. The full Evolving Skies card list below includes 237 cards, 9 rarity groups, links to estimated pull odds, and a virtual pack opening simulator for exploring the set online.
Evolving Skies contains 237 cards currently listed on PokéPack Simulator and was released on August 27, 2021. The card list includes 9 different rarity groups, with Uncommon being the largest group at 51 cards.
Use this page as a Evolving Skies hub: start with the set details and rarity breakdown, then browse the card list or jump straight into the pack opening simulator.
Total card count
237
Cards listed for this set
Rarity groups
9
Based on loaded card data
Largest rarity group
Uncommon (51)
Most represented group
Release date
August 27, 2021
From set metadata
Notable rarity groups in Evolving Skies include Rare Ultra, Rare Rainbow, Rare Holo, Rare, and Rare Holo V. These groups can be useful when comparing the card list with estimated pull odds.
Looking for sealed Evolving Skies products? Compare available listings from eBay and TCGplayer.
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Evolving Skies has 9 rarity groups in the loaded card data. The largest group is Uncommon, with 51 cards. Notable groups shown for this set include Rare Ultra, Rare Rainbow, Rare Holo, Rare, and Rare Holo V.
Uncommon
51
cards
Common
42
cards
Rare Ultra
38
cards
Rare Rainbow
22
cards
Rare Holo
20
cards
Rare
19
cards
Rare Holo V
18
cards
Rare Holo VMAX
15
cards
Showing the most common rarity groups from this set.
Evolving Skies is fun to open virtually because the set has a strong identity around Eeveelutions and high-interest VMAX cards, making each reveal easy to follow even without looking only at rarity numbers.
The card list includes Leafeon VMAX, Glaceon VMAX, Sylveon VMAX, Umbreon VMAX, Rayquaza VMAX, Dragonite V, Espeon V, and many Rare Ultra, Rare Rainbow, Rare Secret, V, and VMAX cards.
Open simulated Evolving Skies packs to enjoy the reveal experience, review your pulls, browse the full card list, and check estimated odds for specific cards in the set.
Browse the cards currently listed for Evolving Skies. Select a card to view more detail, or open a virtual pack to experience the set as a simulated booster pack opening.
You can review the set summary, compare rarity groups, inspect individual cards, open simulated packs, and jump to estimated pull odds from the same page.
The Evolving Skies card list shows the cards currently loaded for this set, including card names, images, and rarity information where available. The page currently displays 237 cards from the set.
Yes. Use the pack opening button to open virtual Evolving Skies packs online for entertainment and set exploration.
This page links to the Pokémon card pull odds calculator, where you can choose Evolving Skies and a target card to view estimated pull odds. These estimates are not official Pokémon pull rates or guarantees for real packs.
Evolving Skies includes 9 rarity groups in the loaded card data. The largest group is Uncommon, with 51 cards.
The notable cards list is generated from cards loaded for this set. Examples shown on this page include Rayquaza VMAX, Umbreon VMAX, Dracozolt VMAX, Duraludon VMAX, Eevee, and Espeon VMAX.
No. This page is mainly for virtual pack opening, set browsing, and card list exploration. Affiliate shopping links may appear for some sets, but PokéPack Simulator does not sell Pokémon products directly.
No. PokéPack Simulator is an independent fan-made project and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, or approved by The Pokémon Company, Nintendo, Game Freak, or Creatures Inc.
Finished exploring Evolving Skies? Browse other Pokémon expansions, open more virtual packs, or use the odds calculator to compare your chances of pulling specific cards.