SV Promo PSA 10 Guide
Set History & Release Context
SV-P is the umbrella code for Japanese Pokemon TCG promotional cards released during the Scarlet & Violet era. Distribution began on November 18, 2022 alongside the Scarlet ex and Violet ex Starter Sets, replacing the prior S-P promo run that covered the Sword & Shield era. Cards in this lineup are not pulled from booster boxes; they are distributed through Pokemon Card Gym events, official tournaments, retailer pre-order bonuses, magazine inserts and product bundles (Bulbapedia accessed 2026-05-09).
Unlike numbered booster expansions, SV-P entries are catalogued sequentially as they release rather than within a fixed set list, which means the lineup expands continuously across the era. The promo run mirrors the design language of mainline SV booster sets, including the Pokemon ex template and Tera-typed variants. SV-P cards do not carry a set symbol from a numbered expansion; instead they are stamped with the SV-P / PROMO designation in the bottom-right card frame.
SV Promo PSA 10 Cards
14 cards
Pikachu
SV Promo · #218 · Japanese

Fukuoka's Pikachu
SV Promo · #289 · Japanese

Victini
SV Promo · #271 · Japanese

Pikachu
SV Promo · #120 · Japanese

PIKACHU/BATIK SHIRT
SV Promo · #155 · Japanese

CHARIZARD ex SP JUMBO C/S
SV Promo · #163 · Japanese

Pikachu
SV Promo · #242 · Japanese

Pikachu
SV Promo · #291 · Japanese

Taipei's Pikachu
SV Promo · #057 · Japanese

PIKACHU/BATIK SHIRT
SV Promo · #190 · Japanese

Tohoku's Pikachu
SV Promo · #260 · Japanese

Pikachu
SV Promo · #197 · Japanese

Pikachu
SV Promo · #001 · Japanese

Hiroshima's Pikachu
SV Promo · #261 · Japanese
Top Chase Cards Explained
Because SV-P is an open-ended promo lineup, the chase tier shifts as new distributions are announced. Early-era highlights include the holographic Pikachu Festival Lead promo, the Pokemon Card Gym monthly winner exclusives, championship-event participation cards, and Tera-type ex variants distributed through paid promo bundles. Pokemon Center and tournament-exclusive Trainer-supporter promos with full-art treatments tend to command the steepest secondary-market premiums.
Within the lineup, distribution scarcity drives value more than rarity stamp: top-cut prize cards from regional and World Championship events, and limited Pokemon Card Gym leader promos, consistently outpace retail-bundle promos in PSA 10 outcomes (Bulbapedia accessed 2026-05-09).
Investment Analysis
SV-P is a thin-supply promo class because most cards are gated behind event participation or limited retail pre-orders rather than mass-printed booster packs. The investment thesis sits on event-scarcity and graded-population scarcity rather than nostalgia. PSA 10 populations remain low for early 2022-2023 distributions, and championship-prize promos are effectively non-reprintable. Conversely, mass-distributed bundle promos (e.g. retail starter bonuses) trend toward bulk pricing once the era closes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does SV-P stand for?
SV-P is the set code Pokemon Japan uses for promotional cards distributed during the Scarlet & Violet era. The 'SV' references the Scarlet & Violet generation; the 'P' marks the card as a promo, not from a numbered booster set.
When did SV-P promos start?
The first SV-P promos released on November 18, 2022, alongside the Scarlet ex and Violet ex Starter Sets in Japan (Bulbapedia accessed 2026-05-09).
How are SV-P cards distributed?
Through Pokemon Card Gym events, championship tournaments, retailer pre-order bonuses, Pokemon Center exclusives, magazine inserts and product bundles. They are not available in standard booster packs.
Are SV-P cards tournament legal?
Yes. SV-P promos are legal in the Japanese Standard format alongside the matching Scarlet & Violet booster expansions.
Do SV-P promos have an English equivalent?
Some SV-P designs are reprinted in English Black Star Promos (SVP series), but stamping, holofoil pattern and card frame language differ. The Japanese SV-P is its own collectible class.
Why are SV-P cards harder to grade in PSA 10?
Many SV-P promos are distributed loose or in thin sleeves rather than sealed booster packs, which increases handling damage and edge-wear before the card is encapsulated.