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Lorcana Player’s Season 2 tracker maps Disney Lorcana’s road to Worlds

Season 2’s tracker gives Lorcana players a clean route from CCQs to Worlds, with championship dates, formats, and event scale in one place.

Sam Ortega··4 min read
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Lorcana Player’s Season 2 tracker maps Disney Lorcana’s road to Worlds
Source: lorcanaplayer.com

The Season 2 tracker gives Disney Lorcana players something rare in organized play: a single map from local qualifiers to Worlds. It shows who has already punched their ticket, where the next qualification shots sit, and how the circuit’s biggest weekends connect into one path.

The tracker gives the season a shape

Season 2 of Disney Lorcana’s competitive circuit is already moving, and the value of a living tracker is that it turns a crowded calendar into something you can actually plan around. Instead of staring at a pile of dates, you can see the ladder: Challenge Championship Qualifiers, Challenges, regional Championships, and Worlds.

That matters because Lorcana is no longer just a series of isolated events. Ravensburger’s official circuit page frames Lorcana Challenge as a global program with events across North America, Europe, and South America, plus championship play staged at Disney destinations. For a player trying to decide where to spend time, testing effort, and travel money, that structure is the story.

The ladder is the point

The strongest part of the Season 2 tracker is not that it lists events. It shows how the season flows. A nearby CCQ is not just a local tournament, it is the front door to the larger competitive path. A Challenge weekend is not just a bigger event, it is one of the places where the road tightens before the Championship stage.

That is why a centralized tracker helps more than a scattered schedule ever could. You can look at one page and decide whether your best move is a nearby qualifier, a high-pressure Challenge, or a longer-term push toward a World Championship invitation. For store testing, it also gives you a realistic sense of when the meta needs to be solved and when a deck needs to be tuned for travel, not just for locals.

The championship weekends are built for serious prep

The championship details tell you exactly why the tracker is so useful. Ravensburger lists the North American Championship for August 28 to 30, 2026 at Disneyland Hotel in Disneyland Resort, and the European Championship for September 11 to 13, 2026 at Disney Newport Bay Club and Disney Hotel New York: The Art of Marvel at Disneyland Paris. Those are not casual stop-ins. They are destination events with hard format and field-size constraints that shape how you prepare.

Both championship main events use Core Constructed, with 2,048 players and 8 rounds of Swiss to qualify for Day 2. The championship LCQ is also Core Constructed and capped at 1,024 players. If you are building a testing schedule, those numbers tell you a lot: you are not just chasing a date, you are preparing for a field that demands endurance, matchup knowledge, and a deck that can survive a long Swiss run.

The circuit is growing in real time

The official update on Challenge events makes one thing obvious: the calendar is still expanding. Ravensburger said there were 3 CCQ events announced so far in 2025, with more to come in 2026. That is the kind of moving target a static article cannot keep up with, but a living tracker can.

The same update also said the final two European Challenge events would have 4,096 player spots open. That is a huge number for a competitive card game circuit, and it changes how players think about access. A bigger field can mean a better chance to get into the room, but it also means more planning around travel, lodging, and which weekend actually gives you the best shot.

The scale is already showing up at individual events

The clearest proof that this circuit is more than theory is the event scale already on display. Ravensburger’s Indianapolis Challenge event page lists 1,747 players for the June 20, 2026 event, along with an Infinity Constructed tournament format. That is a massive turnout for a single Challenge weekend, and it shows why players need one place to track the circuit instead of chasing scattered announcements.

That scale also explains why the tracker’s value compounds over time. As results get added, it becomes easier to see which events matter most, which regions are pulling the biggest fields, and where the most realistic qualification chances may be hiding. The page stops being a calendar and starts functioning like a planning tool.

Worlds is no longer a distant idea

The road now has a clear destination because Lorcana already has a World Champion. ICv2 reported that Dinh Khang Pham became Disney Lorcana’s first World Champion at Walt Disney World Resort in Orlando, Florida over the June 28 to 29, 2025 weekend. Ravensburger used that moment to announce the next year’s worth of Challenge dates, which is exactly the kind of handoff that turns a one-off championship into an actual competitive ecosystem.

That is the big shift the tracker captures. Season 2 is not just another set of events glued to the same game. It is a visible route from community play to the top table, with enough structure around it that serious players can make decisions early instead of reacting late. The tracker is useful because it shows the whole road, and in a circuit like this, seeing the road is already an advantage.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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