Nowadays, almost every hobby store in the UK feels different when you walk in. Usually filled with vintage chase cards gathering silent admiration, the glass cases next to the register have been rearranged. Front and center are brand-new cards with price tags that, eighteen months ago, would have seemed ridiculous. In the Pokémon Trading Card Game, the Mega Evolution era won’t end in July 2026. It already has in many respects.
Official release dates are not anticipated by the secondary market. Really, it never has. However, there seems to be more intense pre-launch speculation surrounding the Mega Evolution – Pitch Black expansion, which is set to start its pre-release window on July 4, 2026. The Mega Gengar ex Special Illustration Rare, a card that won’t be in the hands of most collectors for another month, is already trading at about $960 on the secondary market. Prices on confirmed pull targets have been rising for weeks. It’s difficult to ignore that figure.

This is partly due to basic mechanics. Even seasoned players were taken aback by the power level of Mega Evolution cards when they returned to the competitive format earlier this year. Mega Evolution archetypes now make up between 30 and 40 percent of top-eight finishes at major events, according to tournament data from spring 2026. At that scale, competitive adoption generates long-term demand. This type of structural buying pressure persists beyond opening weekend.
However, there is only so much that competitive play can explain. This has a collector dimension that seems just as significant, if not more so. In 2013, during the X and Y era, Mega Evolution made its game debut. Growing up with those games, collectors are now in their mid-twenties to mid-thirties. They recall the first time Gengar or Charizard changed on screen. Bid histories and sold listings on TCGPlayer show how that emotional memory is currently colliding with significant disposable income. Although nostalgia has always had an impact on this market, it seems to be in control at the moment.
Chaos Rising, which debuted on May 22 and serves as this Mega Evolution cycle’s earlier companion set, already showed what the market was prepared to pay. Trophy sets have been 20% more expensive than regular retail, and the Special Illustration Rare scarcity, which only occurs about once every twelve booster cases, has only increased collector interest. Because early marketing around the Build and Battle Box format has created unusual buzz for what is usually a quieter product tier, Pitch Black appears positioned to push those numbers further.
Whether prices will remain stable once a full supply reaches the shelves is still up in the air. The honest question is always that. The release schedule for 2026 is extremely full, and casual consumers are experiencing release fatigue. Additionally, the October launch of the 30th Anniversary Celebration Collection may divert institutional buyers’ focus from Mega Evolution products as that window draws near. That rotation is probably already on the minds of some investors.
Nevertheless, it’s difficult to ignore the sense that something significant is taking place as Pitch Black’s pre-release momentum grows. The cycle of Mega Evolution did not simply resurface. It came back at the perfect time: when the market had become sufficiently hungry for true scarcity to matter once more, when nostalgic collectors had the means to act on their emotions, and when the competitive meta needed a reset. It remains to be seen if July fulfills all of that promise. However, it appears that the secondary market has already reached a decision.
