Onix, XY Evolutions #61
XY Evolutions · #61/113

Onix

CommonFightingBasic

The Common Onix from XY Evolutions, card 61 of 113 in the run. Standard modern pull rates; secondary market is thin outside the SIR or alt-art tier.

Market price
-USD
Loading recent sales…
Grade in app
PSA 10PSA 9Raw NM
HP
100
Type
Fighting
Stage
Basic
Pokédex
#95
About this card

Onix · XY Evolutions, what to know.

About the Onix card

Onix sits at #61 in XY Evolutions, released in November 2016. XY Evolutions is part of the modern English Pokémon TCG era and uses the standard contemporary card frame and rarity tiers. Illustration by Ken Sugimori. Sugimori is the lead character designer of the Pokémon franchise itself. His TCG illustrations carry a tighter, more on-model feel because they are by the same hand that defined how the Pokémon look in the games.

The flavor text on the card reads: "It usually lives underground. It searches for food while boring its way through the ground at 50 miles per hour." 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 Onix in the Pokémon world

A massive snake of boulders. Brock's signature Pokémon in the anime. Base Set Common. Sentimental and cheap.

Print variants and how to spot them

XY Evolutions shipped in standard Holofoil and Reverse Holo prints. No 1st Edition; that convention had been retired years before. The set reuses original Base Set artwork inside modern XY-era card frames, which makes the Evolutions Charizard a popular modern reprint chase despite the small price gap to other 2016 cards.

Grading and condition

Modern Commons grade easily and trade thinly in graded condition. Raw pack-fresh copies are the practical buy for set completion. PSA 10 submissions on a Common from a modern set rarely return enough premium over raw to justify the service fee.

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.