Squirtle, Base Set #63
Base Set · #63/102

Squirtle

CommonWaterBasic

The Common Squirtle from Base Set, card 63 of 102 in the run. Cheap and abundant in raw, with a small but real grading market.

Market price
-USD
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Grade in app
PSA 10PSA 9Raw NM
HP
40
Type
Water
Stage
Basic
Pokédex
#7
About this card

Squirtle · Base Set, what to know.

About the Squirtle card

Squirtle sits at #63 in Base Set, the first 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.

The flavor text on the card reads: "After birth, its back swells and hardens into a shell. It powerfully sprays foam from its mouth." 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 Squirtle in the Pokémon world

The water starter. A bipedal blue turtle with a brown shell. Tactically the most defensive of the three starters in the games. Steady raw market driven by completionists. The Base Set Squirtle in PSA 10 has appreciated quietly without the headlines of its evolved forms.

Print variants and how to spot them

Base Set produced three print waves that collectors track separately: 1st Edition (the launch print, with an Edition-1 stamp under the artwork), Shadowless (a transitional print with no stamp and no drop shadow on the right side of the artwork), and Unlimited (the long-running print with the drop shadow restored). The price spread between these prints on the same card name is often 10x or more, which is why variant identification matters before any purchase.

Grading and condition

Commons grade most forgivingly of any tier in the set. Centering is the typical grade cap; the soft Wizards-era cardstock picks up edge whitening easily but the high print runs mean clean copies remain affordable. A first-time grading submission on a Common is the cheapest way to learn what each grading service is actually looking at.

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.