Hasuno has built one of those Pokemon TCG catalogs that collectors often discover gradually, one binder page at a time. Bulbapedia lists Golem from Generations as their first card, and the artist has continued to appear across Sun and Moon, Sword and Shield, Scarlet and Violet, and Pokemon TCG Pocket related listings. The profile is not heavy on public biographical detail, so the safest way to understand Hasuno is through the cards themselves rather than through unverified personal claims.
Steady modern TCG illustration across many Pokemon types
The range is broad. PKMN Collectors credits Hasuno on cards such as Golem, Absol, Ultra Necrozma, Yveltal, Lugia, Gyarados, Tyranitar, Lapras V, Melmetal, Arcanine, Scyther, Giratina, Tapu Koko, Revavroom, Magmortar, Cyclizar and Marnie Liepard. The Art of Pokemon tracks an even wider list, including Japanese promo cards and later releases, which helps confirm the long-running nature of the credit. Hasuno often handles Pokemon with clear shapes and strong type identity, from rocky and metallic forms to Water, Fire and Darkness Pokemon.
For collectors, the appeal is consistency. Hasuno cards can fit many collection themes: specific Pokemon lines, type pages, Sun and Moon era binders, or artist runs built around less obvious but very durable contributors. Because the public profile is limited, it is better not to overstate a personal style as a fixed biography. What is documented is a substantial contribution to the TCG, a first credit in the XY era, and a card list that keeps appearing across later products. That makes Hasuno a useful artist page for collectors who want to connect familiar cards to the illustrator behind them.