Pokémon
Pack Value Calculator
This calculator helps you decide whether opening Pokémon packs makes sense for a target card or whether buying the single is the cleaner move. It combines estimated single prices, typical sealed pack costs, and hit-probability math to show the tradeoff before you spend.
Modeled estimate. Last reviewed March 2026. Modeled from current card and set coverage. Updated as price ranges and pull-rate assumptions improve.
Usually cheaper to buy the card
Most people spend more chasing Umbreon ex than buying it, so packs make more sense as fun than as a plan.
Current estimate: Umbreon ex in Prismatic Evolutions, pack cost $5.49, hit probability 0.4% per pack.
HiddenSnags uses pull rate as a planning estimate, then shows a few realistic outcomes so the average does not tell the whole story by itself.
Single-card price
$420
Estimated pull odds
About 1 in 250 packs
0.4% per pack
About where it becomes 50/50
$950
Around here, it is basically 50/50 whether you have hit the card yet.
Typical spend range
$395-$1,900
A realistic middle band for the chase, not a promise.
How lucky you need to be
74%
To beat the cost of buying the single, you need better-than-usual luck.
Chance you still miss after 36 packs
87%
Even after a full booster box, there is still a 87% chance you miss.
Stop here and buy the card instead
76 packs
After about 76 packs, most people have spent more than the card is worth.
How the chase usually feels
Same estimate, shown as an early hit, a typical run, and a long run.
Early hit
$395
Around 72 packs. You got there early.
Typical chase point
$950
Around 173 packs. About 50/50 to have hit by here.
Long run
$3,157
Around 575 packs. A long chase that still happens plenty.
Three ways to play it
Buy the single now
$420
The most predictable option under this estimate.
Keep opening packs until the average hit point
$1,373
This uses the average outcome, not a hard stop.
Open 25, then buy if missed
$517
Spend $137 on packs first, with a 90% miss chance still pushing you to the single.
Most people spend more chasing this card than buying it
If this card is the goal, buying the single is usually the cleaner move. Packs only make sense as a capped fun spend.
A normal chase can still run to about $950 before this card shows up, and if you miss past about 76 packs, buying the single is usually cheaper.
Why this matters: The typical chase is expensive, not just the average one.
What this means for you: Treat sealed product as fun money, not the efficient path to this card.
Reality check: this tool now centers on where a chase usually gets uncomfortable, not just on the average outcome.
Next action
Supporting math
Pack price
$5.49
Expected packs
250.0
Average only. Real results swing around this.
Expected chase cost
$1,373
Break-even point
76.5 packs
Spend catches up to the single around here.
Miss chance after 6 packs
98%
Miss chance after 10 packs
96%
Hit chance if you stop at 25
9.5%
About where it becomes 50/50: the point where you are just as likely to have missed as hit.
Stop here and buy the card instead: the rough point where pack spend starts beating the cost of buying the card.
Beat the single cost: the chance you hit early enough for packs to cost less than buying the card directly.
Chance you still miss after 36 packs: the chance that even a full booster box still comes up empty on this one card.
Formula check: expected packs = 1 / p. Hit chance after N packs = 1 - (1 - p)^N. The new ranges and scenario bands are derived from those same odds rather than from box mapping or guaranteed product sequencing.
Next step
Start with the first button below. It matches the cheaper path under this estimate. Use the other buttons only if you want to compare a different option.
Reality check
There is still about a 87% chance you open a 36-pack booster box and still do not hit it.
This calculator uses estimated prices and pull rates from current coverage and common market ranges. They are planning estimates, not official odds, guarantees, or live prices.
What to do next
Start with the result above. If it says buying the card is usually cheaper, price-check the single next. If you still want more context, use one of these guides.
Keep learning
If you want more context behind the estimate, start with the guides that explain the math, the pack-versus-single tradeoff, and what makes a set worth opening.
Open packs or buy singles?
Get the real answer fast, then come back here for the card-specific math.
Read this first
Is a booster box worth it?
Use this when 36-pack miss risk is the real question behind your decision.
Read box advice
How many packs does it take to pull a chase card?
See the real chase shape before you trust average odds.
Read odds help