odd for the japanese pokemon booster box Base Set Pokemon Booster Box Japanese No Rarity Potential No Bottom Print
SKU: 58126704238
odd for the japanese pokemon booster box

odd for the japanese pokemon booster box Base Set Pokemon Booster Box Japanese No Rarity Potential No Bottom Print

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odd for the japanese pokemon booster box Base Set Pokemon Booster Box Japanese No Rarity Potential No Bottom PrintBase Set Pokemon Booster Box Japanese No Rarity Potential No Bottom Print Variant Factory sealed Japanese base set Pokemon booster box. If you are a serious buyer, please contact us. The deal will be in person, I can fly to you or vice versa. There are two variants, one has For sale in Japan Only printed on the bottom, and one does not (ie blank on the bottom, also known as No Bottom Print). The latter is far more rare and has a chance for No Rarity

Base Set Pokemon Booster Box Japanese No Rarity Potential -No Bottom Print Variant

Factory sealed Japanese base set Pokemon booster box.

If you are a serious buyer, please contact us. The deal will be in person, I can fly to you or vice versa. 

There are two variants, one has “For sale in Japan Only” printed on the bottom, and one does not (ie blank on the bottom, also known as No Bottom Print). The latter is far more rare and has a chance for No Rarity cards.

I, the business owner have both versions. The potential No Rarity version is a Mint condition box, a beautiful piece especially for a sealed collector. It is the box you see in the photos. This price is for the blank bottom box.

For reference, Logan Paul was buying first edition base set booster boxes (ENG) for around $600-650K USD around 2020-2021. The blank bottom Japanese base booster box is orders of magnitude more rare. @LoganPaul if you decide to jump over and collect Japanese Pokemon, reach out to me for this box :)

Each Japanese box has 60 packs and should yield anywhere from 2-4 copies each of Charizard, Blastoise and Venusaur. The last privately PSA 10 NR Charizard sold for $1.7 million USD. The potential upside of this box is huge, without factoring future price increases.

It may be marked as sold out but is actually in stock.

Barcode covered for security purposes.

Checkout our Instagram for more photos! (@CardJourneys)

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SKU: 58126704238

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Thomas M. Magee
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 3
A good supplement to Clausewitz
Format: Paperback
This book is an excellent supplement to Clausewitz or Jomni or anything like that. It puts the parameters of strategy in the context of recent history. I liked that angle about it. You will get a new perspective on strategic thought through that for sure. I can't think of anything that does that for a reader. The nature of the material really would go over with readers who have a history on the topic and who work in the field. The downside to me is how the book supplements other material. It has awesome chapters on various aspects of strategy like technology. I liked the criticism of US policy in the Middle East. The author has some great points. However, the book needs a connecting thread among these chapters. It never clearly defines strategy and why it could or does for a nation. If you are in some staff college studying strategy, this book is your ticket to an A grade.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2024
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Kiwi Cove
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
A Must for contemporary military and civilian leaders in national security
Format: Kindle
This is a very very useful work for members of the contemporary national security strategy community. While Hew's reputation as a historian is very high, it is his thoughtful and insightful comments that he makes in the latter chapters that lay out some of the critical challenges facing contemporary military and civilian leaders.
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Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2016
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Terry Tucker
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 5
Astoundingly Good
Format: Kindle
This is a must have book. It is, beyond a doubt, the best book I have read on military strategy. The author is clear, provides case examples, and more importantly makes this "readable." I retired with 24 years on active duty and spent 15 more working in PMC's working in austere and conflict environments. THIS book is long overdue.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2014
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Rachel Gollub
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 5
Thoughtful and deeply insightful
Format: Kindle
Browse not only goes over the current state of the US military in detail, but also ends with concrete and manageable suggestions to fix the major problems. Really good book.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 2025
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Thomas M. Magee
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 5
Eye Opening, Thought Provoking and Scary
Format: Hardcover
This book will grab your attention, keep you spell bound and scare the heck out of you. The author was the Chief of Staff under Senator McCain for the Senate Armed Services Committee. This book is about new technology in the defense field and our inability to deal with it. The new technology comes in many forms. There now are missiles that fly 2 or 3 times faster than what is available now. The missiles can reach out many many thousands of miles more, enough to hit America from the other side of the world. Now computers are recently coming out on the market which are smaller and 2 or 3 times faster than previous computers. All of that combines to radically speed up the decision time for war operations. The author calls it the kill chain. The change doesn't stop there. The tactics used by our competitors has radically changed warfare. The examples the author uses comes from Russia. He reviews their invasion of "Little Green Men" in the Ukraine turned warfare upside down. They infiltrated troops into the land. Then they merged with dissent forces already in the country. Then the war stars, but on a small scale. Before you know it Russia grabbed Crimea and neutralized a huge slice of the Ukraine. That was the first time since WWII where borders changed. The last part of the book is the most scary. He relies on his experience in Congress. He cites several examples to show where the bureaucracy is incapable of change. The pressures of on going operations, turf wars, political desires to protect home based companies all have immobilized the bureaucracy. He also cites the case of the Army trying to get a new side arm. It took 17 million to test an off the shelf pistol. The case showed how fear of risk has layered on level after level of control and check. Those levels of course adds costs. That was just one weapons program. Can you imagine what the cost is as you expand that out to really big ticket things like carriers. It leads to the Pentagon to continue buying weapons it doesn't need and use tactics which really come out of WWII. As the Pentagon games go on the world's armies change. I think his point about the bureaucracy caught in a never ending loop also might explain other troubles across the globe. That leads to the scary part. Is the country ready for the future? Will it defend the nation for the future? If it isn't 9/11 might be a match strike in comparison.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2020

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