Pokemon TCG Pocket is about to get a lot more wholesome. Everyday Wonders, the upcoming B3b expansion, launches on June 30, 2026 with a cozy picnic theme and one of the most charming card lineups the game has produced. After months of Mega ex powerhouses and high-stakes competitive reveals, this set leans deliberately into cute and fan-favorite Pokemon gathered around an outdoor spread. Here is a full breakdown of every confirmed card, every event coming in July, and what this reveal signals for the rest of the Pocket summer roadmap.
What is the Everyday Wonders Pokemon TCG Pocket set?
Everyday Wonders carries the set code B3b, which positions it as a mid-cycle release within the third Pocket booster series. It launches June 30, 2026 worldwide. The central theme is deliberately light: cute Pokemon hanging out near a picnic, sharing moments rather than competing for supremacy.
That design philosophy is a sharp contrast to what came immediately before. Pulsing Aura built its identity around Mega Lucario ex and the escalating pressure of its signature mechanic. Pulsing Aura Pokemon TCG Pocket guide covers that set in full if you want the comparison. Everyday Wonders pulls in the opposite direction. The promotional artwork leads with Pikachu, Piplup, and Sylveon, three Pokemon known primarily for their broad popularity and visual appeal.
It is also worth noting the timing. The set releases just six days after this announcement, which is unusually short runway. That compressed window almost certainly reflects the Pokemon Company's desire to get the Pocket reveal out before the main TCG's Storm Emeralda set, which also stars Mega Rayquaza ex, drops its own announcement in the coming week or two. More on that below.
Every confirmed card in Everyday Wonders
The official announcement and accompanying trailer confirmed a solid spread of cards across rarity tiers. Here is what we know going into launch day.
Mega Diancie ex
Mega Diancie ex is the set's primary pull target. Diancie is a Fairy-type Mythical Pokemon from the sixth generation, and its Mega form is one of the more visually striking evolutions in the franchise, trading the original's delicate crystalline look for an ornate, jeweled design that practically begs for a full-art card treatment. As a Mega ex in Pocket, it occupies the highest rarity tier in the set.
No attack details have been officially confirmed at time of writing, but Mega ex cards in previous sets have consistently delivered two-energy attacks with powerful secondary effects. Collectors should treat Mega Diancie ex as the chase card of Everyday Wonders from day one. Pack Point grinding toward it will be a priority for completionists.
Diancie also has a slightly unusual rarity history in the main Pokemon TCG. The original XY era Mega Diancie ex was a competitive card that saw real tournament play, and the character carries an association with high-value cards that extends past casual collectors into competitive circles. Even if Everyday Wonders Mega Diancie ex does not make waves in Pocket's battle meta, the card's aesthetic pedigree almost guarantees it becomes one of the most-requested Wonder Pick targets in July. Full-art and Special Illustration Rare treatments on Mega ex cards in previous Pocket sets have pushed secondary market prices significantly above base. Mega Diancie ex will almost certainly follow that pattern.
Hisuian Zoroark ex
Hisuian Zoroark is a genuinely interesting choice for a cute-themed set. The Hisuian form is a Ghost and Normal type with a flowing white and crimson design that leans eerie rather than adorable. Honestly, the contrast works. It gives the set some edge among all the picnic warmth, and the card art potential for Hisuian Zoroark ex in Pocket's full-art format is enormous. Expect it to sit at a high rarity just below Mega Diancie ex in the pull pool.
Dedenne ex
Dedenne is the Antenna Pokemon, a Fairy and Electric type from Generation VI and a longtime fan-favorite for its round hamster-like design. It fits Everyday Wonders perfectly, and its appearance as an ex card rather than a Mega ex puts it one tier below Diancie in terms of rarity. That still makes Dedenne ex a meaningful pull for collectors, especially those who have been following the quiet reintroduction of Fairy-type aesthetics through Pocket even after the main TCG retired the typing.
Pikachu, Piplup, Sylveon, and the dog Pokemon
The base lineup includes Pikachu and Piplup as expected anchor Pokemon, both appearing prominently in the promotional art. Sylveon, the Fairy-type Eeveelution and one of the most popular Pokemon in the franchise, rounds out the upper end of the cute-tier lineup.
Then there are the dog Pokemon. Multiple canine-type Pokemon in the set share a unique mechanic: a thematic attack called Puppy Pile. Think of it as the picnic getting crashed by a mob of happy dogs. The specific Pokemon involved and the attack's exact mechanics have not been fully detailed yet, but the explicit mention in the official reveal suggests this is not just flavor text.
Puppy Pile: cute mechanic or real deck strategy?
Shared attack names across multiple cards in a set have appeared in Pocket before, and the design intent is usually to build cohesion within a themed lineup. When several Pokemon share an attack, your deck gains resilience: if your featured card is prized or knocked out early, another Pokemon in your hand can step up and use the same effect.
Whether Puppy Pile becomes a legitimate deck strategy or remains a charming flavor detail depends entirely on the attack's effect and energy cost. Dog Pokemon with wide representation in Pocket's existing card pool include Arcanine, Rockruff, Lycanroc, Growlithe, and Furfrou. If Everyday Wonders adds two or three of these with a Puppy Pile that hits consistently, there is real potential for a dog-tribal strategy in casual Pocket formats.
Growlithe has a separate July event tied to it, which historically signals a strong rare card in the set worth specifically targeting. That detail alone makes the dog lineup worth watching closely on launch day.
July events: Hisuian Zorua Drop and Growlithe Wonder Pick
Two events are confirmed for July 2026 alongside the Everyday Wonders window:
- Hisuian Zorua Drop Event: Drop events reward consistent play sessions with guaranteed rare card copies, making them one of the best free-to-play paths to completing your set. Hisuian Zorua as the featured Pokemon here almost certainly means it has a card in Everyday Wonders worth specifically chasing.
- Growlithe Wonder Pick Event: Wonder Pick events push the featured Pokemon's packs to the top of the Wonder Pick pool, giving you a much higher chance of selecting a Growlithe-containing pack from another player's opening. If Growlithe carries the Puppy Pile attack, this event is your most efficient free route to the card.
Both events running through July significantly extends Everyday Wonders' shelf life. A set that launches June 30 and has dedicated event support through late July is going to stay relevant for a full six weeks, which is meaningfully longer than a set that drops and immediately gets replaced. Plan your Pack Points and Wonder Picks accordingly.
What comes next: Ruler of the Skies and Mega Rayquaza ex
Everyday Wonders was not announced in isolation. Pokemon confirmed at the same time that Ruler of the Skies, the next full Pocket set, launches July 31, 2026, starring Mega Rayquaza ex.
The simultaneous reveal of two sets is notable on its own. It is even more notable once you factor in the main TCG. Storm Emeralda, the upcoming main-line expansion, also features Mega Rayquaza ex as its headline Pokemon and is scheduled to be revealed in the next week or two. The Pokemon Company is running a coordinated dual-platform hype cycle: Pocket fans get their Rayquaza announcement first, the TCG reveal follows closely behind, and both platforms get to ride the same wave of Mega Rayquaza enthusiasm.
From a collector's perspective, late July is going to demand attention on two fronts simultaneously. If you are tracking both Pocket and the main TCG, start budgeting now. Mega Rayquaza ex is one of the most popular card designs in the entire franchise, and two sets built around it in the same month will move product quickly.
Catalog your Everyday Wonders pulls with BindeX
Six weeks of set content, three new ex cards, a shared attack mechanic across multiple dog Pokemon, and two dedicated July events. That is a lot to track. This is exactly what BindeX is built for.
BindeX lets you log your Pokemon TCG Pocket pulls, track which Everyday Wonders cards you have and which ones you still need, and keep a running picture of your rarity breakdown across every set. When you are grinding Wonder Picks trying to land that last Growlithe variant, knowing exactly what you already own saves Pack Points and prevents duplicate frustration.
Download BindeX on the App Store and get your Everyday Wonders wishlist ready before June 30. And if you want help finding the right tool for your broader collection, our guide to the best Pokemon card collection app in 2026 covers the full landscape.
Everyday Wonders drops in less than a week. The picnic is about to get very crowded.
Frequently asked questions
Everyday Wonders releases on June 30, 2026 in Pokemon TCG Pocket. It is set B3b and follows Pulsing Aura as the latest expansion in the third booster series.
Confirmed cards include Mega Diancie ex, Hisuian Zoroark ex, Dedenne ex, Pikachu, Piplup, and Sylveon. Multiple dog-type Pokemon also appear with a shared Puppy Pile attack.
Mega Diancie ex is the headline pull target in Everyday Wonders. As a Mega ex card it sits at the top rarity tier and will likely hold strong collector value at and after launch.
Ruler of the Skies starring Mega Rayquaza ex is the next confirmed Pokemon TCG Pocket expansion, releasing on July 31, 2026.
A Hisuian Zorua Drop Event and a Growlithe Wonder Pick event are both confirmed for July 2026, giving players extra ways to complete the Everyday Wonders set for free.