Explore Every Expansion

Access a complete database of every Pokemon card ever released. Search by name, set, or artist.

Card Database Feature Preview

Advanced Search

Find exactly what you're looking for with filters for rarity, type, HP, and more.

Set Checklists

Complete your sets with easy-to-use checklists for every expansion.

Visual Gallery

Browse beautiful card art from the earliest Base Set to the latest releases.

The Eyevo card database covers every Pokemon set ever released — 22,000+ cards across 197+ sets, including Base Set through the latest Scarlet & Violet expansions, every promo block, and the major Japanese-only releases. Search runs locally so results are instant, and the filters are built around the questions collectors actually ask.

Filters that match how collectors think

Find cards by name, set, series, rarity, type, HP, illustrator, or supertype (Pokemon / Trainer / Energy). Combine filters: "all Lillie cards across all sets," "every Charizard rated Special Illustration Rare or higher," "every Energy printed in 2023." The filters compose freely.

Set checklists let you mark which cards you own and see what is missing at a glance. Master-set collectors get a separate checklist that includes every variant — reverse holos, Master Ball pattern, Pokeball pattern, and any other treatment a set issues.

Set browser with release context

Each set page shows the release date, total card count, the official set logo, the legality block (Standard / Expanded / Unlimited), and a price summary covering the cheapest reverse-holo and the chase cards. A set's Top 5 cards by current value is one tap away.

The series view groups sets into the wider arcs (Sun & Moon, Sword & Shield, Scarlet & Violet) and surfaces reprint history per card — useful when a Pokemon has appeared in five different sets and you want to know which print run carries the value.

Instant, offline-first results

The card and set indices ship inside the app. Search returns results in milliseconds with no network round-trip, which means you can browse the database on the subway, on a flight, or in any other low-connectivity situation.

The visual gallery view is the secondary path: scrolling card art with set and rarity overlays, useful when you want to skim what a set looks like before deciding whether to dive deeper.