Ultimate Twilight Masquerade Master Set Guide for Collectors
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Twilight Masquerade is one of the most rewarding Scarlet & Violet sets to complete if you want a binder that feels thematic, premium, and still finishable. It released on May 24, 2024 as the sixth expansion of the Scarlet & Violet era, and its English set gives collectors a deep chase without crossing into special set chaos. With 167 numbered cards and 226 total cards including secret rares, it strikes a strong balance between excitement and manageability.
What counts as a master set for Twilight Masquerade
There is no single universal rule for what every collector must include, so the first step is deciding your own finish line. For Twilight Masquerade, the most practical approach is to separate it into three levels. A basic complete set is the 167 numbered cards. A true master set, using the most common collector count, is 373 cards total: the 167 standard cards, plus 147 reverse holos, plus 59 secret rares. Promos, stamped promos, and prerelease cards are usually tracked separately as a bonus layer rather than forced into the core 373.
Why Twilight Masquerade is such a strong set to master
This set stands out for four reasons. First, it has a very clear identity built around Kitakami, Ogerpon, and the masked folklore theme, which makes the binder feel cohesive from start to finish. Second, it is a regular expansion, so you can buy normal sealed products instead of relying on special set boxes. Third, the secret rare section is deep enough to feel meaningful without becoming exhausting. Fourth, the artwork lineup is excellent, which gives the final binder a premium look once the pages start filling out.
The smartest way to approach the set
The biggest mistake is trying to rip your way to completion for too long. Because Twilight Masquerade is a regular expansion with booster boxes, booster bundles, and Elite Trainer Boxes, sealed is great for building your early binder, creating trade fodder, and enjoying the set. But singles should do the heavy lifting once the easy progress slows down. In practice, the cheapest path is usually: get the promos you care about, open a reasonable amount of product, then switch into buying reverse holos and missing secret rares directly.
Best products to buy first
If your goal is pure master set progress, buy products based on pack volume first and promo access second.
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Booster Display Box
This is the cleanest product for building a strong base quickly because it gives you 36 packs in one shot. If your goal is commons, uncommons, holos, and a solid stack of reverse holos, this is the best place to start.
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Pokémon Center Elite Trainer Box
This is worth prioritizing if the stamped Teal Mask Ogerpon promo matters to your definition of complete. It also gives you extra booster packs compared with the regular Elite Trainer Box.
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Regular Elite Trainer Box
Good if you want the Teal Mask Ogerpon promo and a strong opening experience, but not the most efficient product for pure pack volume.
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Booster Bundle
This is the best lower commitment option. It gives you six packs and is a good way to get started without jumping straight into a full display box.
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Build & Battle Box
Good if you want one of the prerelease promos and a smaller opening experience. This is more useful for promo collectors than for raw master set efficiency.
Promos and product exclusives you should not forget
If you want more than the core 373, Twilight Masquerade has a promo layer that is worth tracking separately. Current product tied cards include the Teal Mask Ogerpon Elite Trainer Box promo and the Pokémon Center stamped version, plus the four Build & Battle prerelease promos: Thwackey, Infernape, Froslass, and Tatsugiri. That is why the cleanest approach is to keep the promo layer separate instead of forcing it into your main binder goal.
A clean definition that works well in practice
For most collectors, this is the best framework:
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Complete set
All 167 numbered cards.
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Master set
The 167 numbered cards plus all 147 reverse holos and all 59 secret rares, which is the commonly cited 373 card finish line.
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Master set plus promos
Your 373 core, plus all ETB promos, Pokémon Center stamped promos, prerelease promos, and any release specific variants you personally care about.
That approach keeps the main goal clear while still letting you go full completionist later.
Binder planning before you buy anything
A 373 card core master set needs 373 slots. That means about 21 physical 9 pocket binder sheets if you use both sides, about 42 single sided 9 card pages, or about 16 physical 12 pocket sheets if you use both sides. In other words, a 480 slot binder is a comfortable target for the core master set, while promos can fit in extra space or in a separate promo section.
The best binder layout for Twilight Masquerade
The cleanest layout is numerical order with variants grouped behind each card.
- Base card first
- Reverse holo second
- Secret rares in set number order at the back
- Promos in a separate promo section
This makes missing cards easy to spot and keeps the set readable from start to finish. The grouping works especially well here because the reverse holo layer is large enough to matter, but still manageable if you stay organized.
What to buy sealed and what to buy as singles
Here is the best practical flow.
- Buy the promo products you actually care about.
- Open enough packs to enjoy the set and build a decent trade pile.
- Stop opening once duplicates start dominating your pulls.
- Buy reverse holos and lower rarity holes as singles.
- Save your budget for the top chase cards instead of hoping to spike them from packs.
This works especially well in Twilight Masquerade because the endgame is usually not the commons or regular holos. It is the reverse holos, illustration rares, special illustration rares, and top trainer chases that slow collectors down. Once your binder is mostly filled, singles are almost always the faster and cleaner way to finish.
The cards most likely to bottleneck your completion
As of March 19, 2026, the cards most likely to slow down your last stretch include Greninja ex #214, Perrin #220, Eevee #188, Carmine #217, Bloodmoon Ursaluna ex #216, Chansey #187, and Lana’s Aid #219. The good news is that Twilight Masquerade is still very finishable if you stay organized and avoid overspending on the biggest cards too early.
Best budget strategy
If you want the most efficient route, do this:
- Finish commons, uncommons, holos, and reverse holos first.
- Buy lower cost secret rares during periods of heavy opening.
- Leave the biggest chase cards for last unless you find a strong trade opportunity.
- Do not overpay early for hype cards unless they are your personal grails.
- Keep a separate list for promos so they do not blur your progress on the core 373.
That order keeps momentum high. You will see visible binder progress quickly, and you avoid sinking too much budget into early chase cards before the market settles.
A realistic completion roadmap
Here is the most balanced plan for most collectors.
Phase 1
Buy a Booster Display Box if you want the strongest sealed start. Add a regular or Pokémon Center Elite Trainer Box if the Teal Mask Ogerpon promo matters to you.
Phase 2
Add a Build & Battle Box if you care about prerelease promos and want to keep the promo section complete.
Phase 3
Open enough product to build your binder base and a duplicate stack. At that point, stop treating sealed as your main path.
Phase 4
Buy the reverse holos in batches, then target the illustration rares, special illustration rares, and top chase cards one by one. Use your duplicate hits for trade leverage whenever possible.
Final recommendation
If you want the cleanest, most satisfying version of Twilight Masquerade, treat 373 cards as the core master set and treat promos as a separate completion tier. That gives you a serious but achievable goal, keeps your binder organized, and avoids the common trap of mixing every promo and product exclusive into the base target from day one. Twilight Masquerade is one of the best Scarlet & Violet sets to master if you want a project that feels thematic, premium, and actually finishable.
Ready to master set Twilight Masquerade?
Skip the guesswork and build your binder with confidence from day one. Our Twilight Masquerade Complete Set + Master Set + Checklist bundle helps you organize every slot, track your progress, and see exactly what you still need to complete the set.



