Attack of the Vine chase cards highlight Ming Lee and top targets
Ming Lee leads the hype, but Rapunzel and Christopher Robin show where Attack of the Vine's real collector value and table demand may land.

1. Ming Lee, Giant Red Panda
TheGamer’s chase-card guide puts Ming Lee at the top because she looks like a premium pull before she looks like a collectible. Her 10/10 stats and Temporary Shift interaction make her a legitimate threat on the table, and the reduced-cost play pattern gives her the kind of efficiency that collectors notice when a card feels built to matter immediately.

That matters in Attack of the Vine because the set is only part of a 207-card main lineup, with standard and foil versions in circulation, so the market will quickly sort between casual pulls and cards that feel central to play. Ming Lee benefits from the kind of demand that comes from both sides of the game, a recognizable Turning Red character with real competitive pressure behind the name.
2. Rapunzel, Escaping the Tower
Rapunzel is the clearest example of chase value being shaped by rarity, not booster luck. She is a Set Championship participation promo, not a normal pack card, and card listings place her at one ink with 2 Strength and 1 Willpower, which makes her as much a tournament prize as a collector target.
That distinction is the real story here. Ravensburger’s tournament materials put Set Championships inside Lorcana’s organized play structure, and the June 2026 Indianapolis Challenge drew nearly 2,000 Illumineers to the Indiana Convention Center, a reminder that event cards now sit at the center of the chase conversation. When a card like Rapunzel is tied to that scene, its appeal comes from scarcity, status, and play-adjacent demand all at once.
3. Christopher Robin, Hunny Sage
Christopher Robin is the card that gives the guide its strongest deckbuilding argument. The appeal is not just the name recognition, it is the way the card opens a Hunny package that bends Lorcana’s usual ink expectations and gives builders a fresh lane to explore, which is exactly the kind of design that turns a card into a long-term target instead of a short-lived flash point.
That longer view is especially important as Attack of the Vine arrives on July 17, 2026 in game stores and select Disney Parks and stores, with Ravensburger framing the set as the culmination of a year-long storyline about a brave garden party pushing deep into the roots to stop the Vine. The set also brings glimmers from Pixar’s Up, Monsters, Inc., and Turning Red, and it lands in a format environment where Infinity Constructed allows any cards regardless of rotation while future rotations are set to happen once a year. Christopher Robin fits the kind of card players will chase because it can matter in a binder, in a deck, and in the next wave of Lorcana conversation.
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