Therapeutic Energy
Therapeutic Energy (Mirror Holofoil)
Therapeutic Energy is a None Pokémon TCG printing from SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex (#188). Cactaur's latest catalog snapshot shows a TCGPlayer market reference near $0.06 for ungraded copies. The set released in 2023. Scan your copy in the Cactaur app for condition-aware pricing.
Who is this card for?
Therapeutic Energy suits collectors working on SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex who need the None slot. Compare listing photos to your target finish; skip impulse buys when variant or wear is unclear.
What is Therapeutic Energy from SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex?
Therapeutic Energy is a Energy card in SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex numbered 188. Therapeutic Energy from SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex should be evaluated with set context, finish, and condition together. Verify finish, condition, and listing photos before paying above recent market references in the Cactaur catalog.
What is Therapeutic Energy worth today?
Cactaur tracks a TCGPlayer market reference near $0.06 for Therapeutic Energy. Low and high spread varies by finish. Per-finish references: Normal: $0.04; Holofoil: $0.85. Verify finish, condition, and listing photos before paying above recent market references in the Cactaur catalog. Verify finish, condition, and listing photos before paying above recent market references in the Cactaur catalog.
| Set | SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex |
|---|---|
| Number | 188 |
| Rarity | None |
| TCGPlayer USD | $0.06 |
| Cardmarket EUR | — |
| Normal | $0.04 |
| Holofoil | $0.85 |
How collectible is Therapeutic Energy?
Therapeutic Energy is listed as None in SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex. Set collectors, type collectors, and art buyers may value this card differently — confirm variant before paying chase premiums. Verify finish, condition, and listing photos before paying above recent market references in the Cactaur catalog.
What are the key details for Therapeutic Energy?
Catalog fields: set SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex, rarity None, regulation G. Cross-check holo pattern and language when buying online. Verify finish, condition, and listing photos before paying above recent market references in the Cactaur catalog. Verify finish, condition, and listing photos before paying above recent market references in the Cactaur catalog.
Cactaur's take
Therapeutic Energy from SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex should be evaluated with set context, finish, and condition together.
Pros
- Therapeutic Energy is catalogued as None printing in SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex, making set and number verification straightforward.
- Public market data shows a TCGPlayer reference near $0.06 across finishes (Normal: $0.04; Holofoil: $0.85).
Cons
- Raw market prices vary by condition, language, and holo variant — NM estimates are not slab grades.
Verdict: Use $0.06 as a benchmark, then adjust for finish, grade, and how quickly you need to buy or sell.
FAQ
How much is Therapeutic Energy worth?
Cactaur's catalog shows a TCGPlayer market reference near $0.06 for ungraded Therapeutic Energy from SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex. Actual value depends on condition, language, and finish such as holo or reverse holo. Scan your card in the Cactaur app for a tailored estimate.
What set is Therapeutic Energy from?
Therapeutic Energy is listed in SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex as card #188. Always match both name and collector number because many Pokémon share names across sets.
How rare is Therapeutic Energy?
Our catalog lists Therapeutic Energy as None in SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex. Rarity guides pull rates but does not alone determine price — chase art, demand, and condition matter.
Is Therapeutic Energy good for collectors or players?
Therapeutic Energy is primarily a collector reference in SV4a: Shiny Treasure ex. Compare finish and centering if you are buying graded or sealed-collection copies. Verify finish, condition, and listing photos before paying above recent market references in the Cactaur catalog.
What is the difference between holo and reverse holo Therapeutic Energy?
Finish variants of Therapeutic Energy carry separate market listings. Normal: $0.04; Holofoil: $0.85 before buying — sellers often mix up reverse holo and non-holo photos.