The Pikachu Illustrator card is one of the rarest Pokemon cards ever made, with only 39 copies produced back in 1998 as promo items for a Japanese illustration contest. These cards rarely come up for sale, and their prices can hit millions of dollars at auction, making them a hot topic for collectors on sites like PokemonPricing.com.
When it comes to Le Freeport in Singapore, a super-secure storage spot often called Asia’s Fort Knox, there is no public record or confirmed info on any Pikachu Illustrator cards being kept there. Le Freeport holds high-value items like rare fossils and art owned by crypto investors, but Pokemon cards do not show up in reports about its contents.[2]
Pokemon card experts track the known 39 Pikachu Illustrators through sales history, grading reports from PSA or BGS, and collector databases. None of these sources link any to Le Freeport. Most are in private collections in Japan, the US, or Europe, with a few traded at big auctions like the one Logan Paul announced for his copy.[2]
If a Pikachu Illustrator were stored in a place like Le Freeport, it would likely stay hidden to protect its value from thieves or copycats. For now, collectors focus on the total supply of 39, with about 15 graded so far. Prices for top-condition ones have climbed past $5 million, driven by scarcity and hype.
To check current values, watch recent sales on auction sites or grading slabs. No Freeport connection changes the big picture: these cards are ultra-rare, and owning one puts you in an elite club.


