Uncommon

Seaking

Base Set 2 · #60/130

Seaking (60/130), the Uncommon from Base Set 2, has an estimated ungraded market price of about about $1.

As of July 16, 2026 · tracked daily by Riffle · estimates, not financial advice

Seaking, Pokémon card

Image © The Pokémon Company, shown for identification.

Market price · ungraded · est.
about $1
as of July 16, 2026 · est.

About Seaking

Seaking is a Uncommon (60/130) from the Pokémon Base Set 2 set, released February 24, 2000. Ungraded copies currently trade at an estimated market price of about $1. The artwork is by Kagemaru Himeno. Riffle tracks its market price daily; graded (PSA) comps and full price history are available with Riffle.

Details

Set
Base Set 2
Number
60/130
Rarity
Uncommon
Character
Seaking
Illustrator
Kagemaru Himeno
Released
February 24, 2000

Other versions of Seaking

Seaking appears on 6 different cards across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values. This page covers #60/130 from Base Set 2; the collector number printed at the bottom of the card tells them apart.

  1. Seaking#46/64 · Jungle$5–$6Uncommon
  2. Seaking#37/64 · Neo Revelation$2–$4Uncommon
  3. Seaking#119/165 · 151$1–$2Uncommon
  4. Seaking#045/167 · Twilight Masqueradeunder $1Common
  5. Seaking#021/131 · Prismatic Evolutionsunder $1Uncommon

FAQ

How much is Seaking (60/130) worth?

Seaking (60/130), the Uncommon from Base Set 2, has an estimated ungraded market price of about about $1. Note: 5 other cards named Seaking exist across the sets Riffle tracks, at very different values; check the collector number.

Which Seaking card is this, and how do I tell the versions apart?

This page covers Seaking (60/130), the Uncommon (about about $1) from Base Set 2.

The other versions: #46/64 from Jungle (Uncommon, about $5–$6); #37/64 from Neo Revelation (Uncommon, about $2–$4); #119/165 from 151 (Uncommon, about $1–$2); #045/167 from Twilight Masquerade (Common, about under $1); #021/131 from Prismatic Evolutions (Uncommon, about under $1).

The collector number printed at the bottom of the card is the reliable way to tell them apart.

More from Base Set 2

View all Base Set 2 cards →