Charmeleon, Legendary Collection #37
Legendary Collection · #37/110

Charmeleon

UncommonFireStage 1

Charmeleon is card 37 of 110 in Legendary Collection, an Uncommon. Easy to find raw, cheap to grade, and a frequent first-submission pick.

Market price
-USD
Loading recent sales…
Grade in app
PSA 10PSA 9Raw NM
HP
80
Type
Fire
Stage
Stage 1
Pokédex
#5
About this card

Charmeleon · Legendary Collection, what to know.

About the Charmeleon card

Charmeleon sits at #37 in Legendary Collection, the twelfth of the Wizards of the Coast print runs. Illustration by Mitsuhiro Arita. Arita was the original Pokémon TCG illustrator and the artist behind the Base Set Charizard. His vintage-era art has a painterly quality that distinguishes it from the cleaner reference-style work of the Sugimori cards. In the games, Charmeleon evolves from Charmander, which makes it a late-stage card in the line.

The flavor text on the card reads: "When it swings its burning tail, it raises the temperature to unbearably high levels." Pokédex entries from this era are short and often quirky, written by the original Japanese localization team for a specific stat-block layout that no longer exists in modern cards.

About Charmeleon in the Pokémon world

The middle Charmander stage. Bigger, more aggressive, and notoriously hard to befriend in the games. The forgotten middle of the most famous evolution line. Charmeleon usually trades in the shadow of its evolved form. Collectors completing a Charmander to Charizard 1st Edition run pay up; standalone demand is thin.

Print variants and how to spot them

Legendary Collection shipped in Standard and Reverse Holo prints. The Reverse Holo treatment was new with this set: foil applied to the card background rather than the artwork window. There is no 1st Edition, since Wizards retired the stamp by this point in the production timeline.

Grading and condition

Uncommons grade more forgivingly than Rare Holos but the same centering and edge requirements apply. Raw copies in pack-fresh condition are easy to find. A PSA 10 submission on a clean Uncommon is a low-cost way to learn how the grading process scores Wizards-era cardstock.

If you are buying this card

Raw copies of this card are inexpensive enough that the grading math rarely justifies submission unless you have a clearly pack-fresh example. For set completionists, picking up a clean raw copy and sleeving it is the practical move.