After some early leaks late last month, things have gone quiet for the upcoming Hatsune Miku Secret Lair precon. Today, the virtual idol broke the silence in a big way, however, with a fresh batch of 12 new leaks making its way online.
Building on the high-value foundations from previous leaks, there are some banger reprints here that should add a pretty penny to the precon’s price. While it’s still early days, this upcoming deck, seemingly helmed by Trostani, Selesnya’s Voice, is already coming together nicely.
The Big Hitters

The clear frontrunner from today’s new leaks is Finale of Devastation, coming in at a whopping $53. This is one of the better entries in green’s direct-to-play creature tutor suite, grabbing anything from either your hand or graveyard. It also comes with a Craterhoof Behemoth-esque finisher ability built in, letting it serve as an outlet for big mana decks to boot.
While it sees scattered play in Modern and Pioneer, Finale of Devastation is really a Commander card at heart. Over 315,000 decks run it according to EDHREC, ranging from big creature decks like Pantlaza, Sun-Favored to trickier builds like Glarb, Calamity’s Augur. It also sees extensive play in cEDH and Canadian Highlander, with top-tier strategies such as Kinnan, Bonder Prodigy running it as a win condition.
After Finale, there are a couple more pricey reprints from today’s batch in Bountiful Promenade and Vorinclex, Voice of Hunger. Promenade is one of the best Selesnya dual lands, and sees play in pretty much every Commander deck in its colors that can afford its $18 price tag. While it was just reprinted in the Marvel Super Heroes Commander decks, the Miku art here should maintain that price at least.
Vorinclex, on the other hand, is more niche but also more terrifying, essentially serving as a mana doubler and mass land denial in one. Now that it’s off the Game Changers list, it largely sees play in decks that can ramp or cheat big creatures into play, like Kona, Rescue Beastie. With a current price tag of around $13, this is another great value add for the Miku precon.
Business As Usual

Beyond the big money cards in today’s leaks, there are plenty of solid, lower-value hits in here as well. Halo Fountain, for instance, is a nice $8 reprint, being a staple in Token decks like Baylen, the Haymaker. It’s also a nifty alternate win condition, letting decks like Cadira, Caller of the Small go over the top on more contested boards.
Fountain is joined by Grand Crescendo and Soul Warden, two more excellent reprints that support the deck’s token theme well. Crescendo is around $3 now, thanks to a recent reprint, but it’s been a fairly expensive card in the past. It’s an absolute banger in token decks like Zurgo Stormrender, as both a proactive play and a protection piece.
Soul Warden, similarly, is around $3 due to reprints, but has a ton to offer in all manner of Commander decks. From Lifegain lists like Karlov of the Ghost Council, to Token decks like Darien, King of Kjeldor, it has no shortage of homes. It even sees a good bit of constructed play in Premodern Aluren and Pauper White Weenie decks.
As is tradition at this point, the Hatsune Miku Secret Lair precon will also come with a copy of Cultivate. This is one of the most-played cards, never mind ramp pieces, in Commander, so its inclusion here makes sense. That said, at $0.40, it is a very unexciting reprint. Cultivate’s previous Secret Lair printing goes for around $7.50, mind you, so this one could surprise us yet.
The First Timers

In addition to the more established cards revealed today, we also got to see a few first-time reprints from the Hatsune Miku precon. Song of the Worldsoul is the clear highlight here, bringing repeatable Populate back for the first time since Commander 2019. It’s a reasonably popular card in Commander decks like Anikthea, Hand of Erebos, and at $4, it’s a decent value add, too.
Unfortunately, the other two first-timers here, Break Down and Tigereye Cameo, are considerably less exciting. Break Down is a fairly mediocre removal spell from Fallout, and adds just $0.25 to the drop overall. While decks that care about artifact presence, like Gimbal, Gremlin Prodigy, can run it, cheaper options are better in most cases.
Tigereye Cameo is more interesting, as we haven’t seen it since Invasion in 2000, but it’s still a pretty weak card. Three mana for a two-color rock is far from acceptable in 2026, especially in green, where better ramp is prevalent. This is a doubly disappointing inclusion since it appears to be the bonus card for the deck based on the collector number.
Overall, despite a few duds, the Hatsune Miku Secret Lair precon is looking very promising indeed. In fact, as many have noted already, the biggest issue with this deck is likely to be the difficulty of securing it before stock runs out.
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