A Chinese Rapidash Pokémon card is usually not especially rare unless it’s a specific promo, secret rare, or limited-print version. For example, a Chinese Rapidash V #135 is currently listed at a modest market price rather than as a highly scarce chase card.

What affects rarity

  • Set and language matter. Chinese-language cards can be less common in some markets, but that does not automatically make every card rare.
  • Variant matters most. Secret rares, special promos, and event cards are much rarer than standard prints.
  • Condition and grading matter. Even when a card is not rare, a high-grade copy can be harder to find and worth more.

For Rapidash specifically

  • A normal Chinese Rapidash or Galarian Rapidash card is generally a collector card, not a trophy card.
  • If you mean a special Chinese promo or alternate-art Rapidash, that can be much scarcer than the standard version.
  • Community discussion also suggests Chinese cards are often less popular in the broader market, which can keep prices lower even when the print is limited.

Practical read

If you’re trying to judge one card, the key question is: which Rapidash exactly? The set number, rarity symbol, and whether it’s a promo usually tell you more than the language alone.

Here’s the quick rule of thumb:

  • Standard Chinese Rapidash: usually common to moderately available.
  • Special art or promo Chinese Rapidash: potentially rare.
  • Tournament/event Chinese Rapidash: can be very rare.

TL;DR

Most Chinese Rapidash cards are not super rare ; only specific special- print versions are likely to be scarce.