If you are searching price-charting data for an “EX Ruby & Sapphire Kyogre Holo,” the most important thing to know up front is that this exact card does not exist. The base EX Ruby & Sapphire set, released in 2003 with 109 cards, contains no Kyogre at all. Card #006/109 in that set is Dustox, a Holo Rare, not Kyogre. So any price guide promising a value for a “Kyogre Holo” from this specific set is pointing you toward a card that was never printed in it. What almost certainly happened is a mix-up between sets and products. There is a genuine Kyogre ex from this exact era, but it was distributed as a 2003 Nintendo Black Star Promo through the Ruby & Sapphire Challenge, catalogued as Kyogre ex #001.
There is also a later, far more valuable Kyogre Holo in the 2005 EX Delta Species set, which is a different release entirely. Knowing which of these you actually own is the difference between pricing a modest promo and pricing a card that has sold for five figures. For collectors, this is a useful reminder that set names in price guides are frequently scrambled. Before you chase a number, confirm the set, the card number, and the product the card came from. A PSA 10 EX Delta Species Kyogre recorded a $13,100 sale on eBay dated August 17, 2025, while the 2003 Black Star Promo trades for a fraction of that. The title alone tells you almost nothing until you verify the source set.
Table of Contents
- Is There Really a Kyogre Holo in the EX Ruby & Sapphire Set?
- Where Does the “Kyogre Holo” Price Confusion Come From?
- The 2005 EX Delta Species Kyogre Holo and Its Five-Figure Sale
- How to Price-Check a Kyogre Card the Right Way
- Common Pitfalls When the Card in the Title Does Not Exist
- Reading the Set Symbol and Card Number to Settle the Question
- The Three Real Kyogre Cards Collectors Confuse
- Frequently Asked Questions
Is There Really a Kyogre Holo in the EX Ruby & Sapphire Set?
No. The 2003 EX ruby & Sapphire set has 109 cards and Kyogre is not one of them. If you pull up the PSA Auction Prices set index for 2003 Pokemon EX Ruby & Sapphire, you can scroll the entire checklist and find no Kyogre entry. The slot many people assume holds a legendary Water-type, #006/109, is occupied by Dustox, a Holo Rare evolution of Cascoon. Sports Card Investor lists this card directly as Dustox 006/109 from the 2003 EX Ruby & Sapphire Holo run. The confusion is understandable.
Ruby and Sapphire as video games are built around the box legendaries Kyogre and Groudon, so collectors intuitively expect those Pokemon to anchor the tie-in card set. They do not. The trading card set named after the games drew its roster from the early Hoenn dex more broadly, and the marquee legendaries were instead released through promotional channels rather than the numbered main set. As a comparison, think of how Mewtwo is associated with the first films but its most sought-after cards came from promos and later sets rather than always sitting in the base set people assume. The lesson is the same: a Pokemon’s fame in the games does not guarantee it appears in the identically named card set. Always check the printed card number against the official set checklist before trusting a price.
Where Does the “Kyogre Holo” Price Confusion Come From?
The real card driving this search is most likely the Kyogre ex from the 2003 Nintendo Black Star Promo series, distributed through the Ruby & Sapphire Challenge event. It is catalogued as Kyogre ex #001 in that promo line, and PSA tracks it under its own Auction Prices entry as a 2003 Black Star Promo Kyogre ex-Holo. Because it shares the “Ruby & Sapphire” naming and the same release window, listing software and casual sellers routinely fold it into the main set, producing the phantom “EX Ruby & Sapphire Kyogre Holo” title. The warning here is concrete: when a price guide or marketplace listing combines a promo card with a numbered set, the comparable sales it shows you may be blended from two different products with very different values.
If you price your Black Star Promo Kyogre ex using sales data that has been contaminated with EX Delta Species Kyogre figures, you will badly overestimate what your card is worth. The reverse is also true for a Delta Species owner who anchors to promo prices. This is why serious buyers ignore the headline title and look at the card’s actual identifiers. A Black Star Promo carries the promo star and a promo number; a numbered set card carries an X/Y collector number. Reading those two markings takes seconds and prevents the single most common pricing error in this corner of the hobby.
The 2005 EX Delta Species Kyogre Holo and Its Five-Figure Sale
If your card genuinely says Kyogre and is a Holo with a high-value sales history, the candidate you are probably thinking of is the 2005 EX Delta Species Kyogre Holo. This is a separate set released two years after EX Ruby & Sapphire, and it is the source of the most eye-catching number attached to any Kyogre from this general era. PSA’s Auction Prices Realized records a PSA 10 example of the EX Delta Species Kyogre-Holo selling for $13,100 on eBay, dated August 17, 2025. That figure illustrates how much grade and set together drive value.
A flawless gem-mint copy from a desirable set can command five figures, while ungraded or lower-grade copies of the same card sell for a small fraction of that. The $13,100 sale is a PSA 10 result, not a baseline; treating it as the going rate for any Kyogre Holo would be a serious miscalculation. For a specific example of how easily these get conflated, imagine listing a raw EX Delta Species Kyogre and titling it “EX Ruby & Sapphire Kyogre Holo” to ride the recognizable set name. A buyer doing real homework will catch the discrepancy immediately, and the listing loses credibility. Accurate set attribution protects both the value and the trust in the sale.
How to Price-Check a Kyogre Card the Right Way
The practical workflow is to identify the card before you look up a single price. Start with the bottom corner collector number and the copyright year printed on the card. A 2003 promo, a 2005 EX Delta Species, and a modern Primal Kyogre EX from the Omega Ruby/Alpha Sapphire era are three different cards with three different markets. Only once you have pinned the exact card do you pull comparable sales, and you pull them from sources that separate set and grade rather than lumping them together. The tradeoff between data sources is worth understanding.
PSA Auction Prices Realized gives you grade-specific, verified sold results, which is the gold standard for a graded card, but its data is thin for cards that rarely sell in high grades. Broad marketplace averages give you more volume but mix grades, sets, and even counterfeits, so the average can be misleading. For a card like Kyogre that spans promos, vintage sets, and modern EX printings, grade-and-set-specific PSA data is usually the more trustworthy anchor even when it shows fewer sales. A current example of the modern branch: Primal Kyogre EX from the Omega Ruby/Alpha Sapphire era appears in active PSA 10 listings on the secondary market today. That is yet another distinct card from the 2003 and 2005 versions, and pricing it against vintage Kyogre data would be meaningless. Match the card to its own market, never to a similarly named one.
Common Pitfalls When the Card in the Title Does Not Exist
The biggest risk with a title like “EX Ruby & Sapphire Kyogre Holo” is that you can spend real money on a premise that is false. Because no such card exists in that set, any listing using the title is, at best, mislabeled and, at worst, deliberately vague. A seller who cannot or will not tell you the printed collector number and copyright year is a seller you should treat with caution, because those two details immediately resolve which card is actually being sold. A second pitfall is automated price tools that scrape titles rather than card identifiers. These tools will happily generate a “value” for a nonexistent card by averaging whatever listings share those keywords, which means promo sales, Delta Species sales, and modern EX sales all get blended into one meaningless figure.
The limitation is structural: a guide that keys on text strings cannot distinguish three different Kyogre cards that all contain the words “Kyogre,” “Holo,” and “Ruby” or “Sapphire” somewhere in the listing. The defensive move is to refuse to act on any price until the underlying card is unambiguous. If you are buying, ask for clear photos of the card number and set symbol. If you are selling, title your listing with the correct set so your comparable sales are clean. Precision is not pedantry here; it is the only thing standing between you and a number built from the wrong cards.
Reading the Set Symbol and Card Number to Settle the Question
Every modern-era Pokemon card carries two small but decisive markings: a set symbol and, for numbered sets, a collector number in the format X/Y. On a base EX Ruby & Sapphire card, that number runs out of 109, and the #006 slot reads Dustox, confirmed by both the PSA set index and Sports Card Investor’s listing of Dustox 006/109. A Black Star Promo, by contrast, shows a black star with the word PROMO and a standalone promo number such as #001 for the Kyogre ex.
As a concrete check, if someone hands you a card and claims it is the “Ruby & Sapphire Kyogre Holo,” look for an X/109 number. If the card is Kyogre, it will not have one, because Kyogre is not in that 109-card checklist. That single observation is enough to redirect the conversation to the promo or to EX Delta Species, where Kyogre actually appears.
The Three Real Kyogre Cards Collectors Confuse
There are three legitimate cards that get swept under the false “EX Ruby & Sapphire Kyogre Holo” label, and keeping them straight is the whole game. The first is the 2003 Nintendo Black Star Promo Kyogre ex #001, tied to the Ruby & Sapphire Challenge and tracked by PSA as a Black Star Promo Kyogre ex-Holo. The second is the 2005 EX Delta Species Kyogre Holo, the one with the documented $13,100 PSA 10 eBay sale dated August 17, 2025.
The third is the modern Primal Kyogre EX from the Omega Ruby/Alpha Sapphire era, which currently shows up in PSA 10 listings on the secondary market. Each of these has its own checklist position, its own grade population, and its own pricing data, and none of them belongs to the base 2003 EX Ruby & Sapphire 109-card set where collectors keep looking. The card that occupies the spot people expect Kyogre to hold, #006/109, is Dustox.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a Kyogre card in the EX Ruby & Sapphire set?
No. The 2003 EX Ruby & Sapphire set has 109 cards and none is Kyogre. Card #006/109 is Dustox, a Holo Rare, per the PSA set index and Sports Card Investor.
Then which Kyogre card matches that era?
The 2003 Nintendo Black Star Promo Kyogre ex #001, distributed through the Ruby & Sapphire Challenge. PSA tracks it as a Black Star Promo Kyogre ex-Holo.
What is the most valuable Kyogre Holo from the mid-2000s?
The 2005 EX Delta Species Kyogre Holo. A PSA 10 example sold for $13,100 on eBay, dated August 17, 2025, per PSA Auction Prices Realized.
Is there a modern Kyogre EX too?
Yes. Primal Kyogre EX from the Omega Ruby/Alpha Sapphire era appears in current PSA 10 secondary-market listings, a separate card from the 2003 and 2005 versions.
How do I tell which Kyogre I have?
Check the collector number and copyright year. A numbered set card shows X/Y; a promo shows a black star, the word PROMO, and a promo number such as #001.
Why do price guides show a value for a card that does not exist?
Many tools scrape listing titles rather than card identifiers, blending promo, Delta Species, and modern EX sales into one misleading figure.


