Leaked Hatsune Miku Secret Lair points to full Commander deck
A leaked Hatsune Miku Commander deck is fueling speculation that Wizards of the Coast may be moving pop-star crossovers from cosmetics to full playable products.
A leaked Hatsune Miku Commander deck surfaced on eBay for $500 and climbed to $3,051 after 36 bids, turning a Secret Lair mix-up into a bigger question for Commander players: if the leak is real, is Wizards of the Coast testing a fully playable crossover deck instead of another one-off drop?
The confirmed paper trail matters here. Wizards officially brought Hatsune Miku into Secret Lair on April 29, 2024, then opened the first of four themed drops with Spring Superdrop 2024 on May 13, 2024. Those releases were sold in English and Japanese, and Wizards described Hatsune Miku: Digital Sensation as a limited-quantity product available while supplies last and capped at 5 per customer. That scarcity has already helped make Miku one of the most recognizable recurring crossover properties in Secret Lair.

The leak suggests Wizards may be going much further. The deck is being described as a green-white, 100-card Commander list built around life gain and creature-token synergies, with Miku-branded renamed reprints including Miku, Song of the People as Trostani, Selesnya’s Voice, Archangel of Tunes as Archangel of Thune, Cascade of Song as Halo Fountain, Miku, Voice over All as Shalai, Voice of Plenty, and Miku, the Complete Performer as Vorinclex, Voice of Hunger. One of the first cards identified in the list was Finale of Devastation, which MTG Rocks put at about $53, alongside Bountiful Promenade, Halo Fountain, Grand Crescendo, Soul Warden, Song of the Worldsoul, and Vorinclex.
That card mix is why the leak has landed so hard in Commander circles. A Miku precon loaded with staples and a mythic headline card like Finale of Devastation points to a product that could sell on gameplay value as much as branding, which is a different lane from a cosmetic Secret Lair drop. It also raises the same availability concern that follows every limited Wizards crossover: once players see a wanted commander, a strong mana base, and cards people already need for the format, demand can outrun supply fast.

The timing only sharpens the comparison. Wizards is already shipping Marvel Super Heroes Commander decks on June 26, 2026, and the Miku leak arrives in the middle of that broader Universes Beyond push. If this list is accurate, the next phase of pop-star crossover products in Commander may not be a few alternate-art singles at all, but a full 100-card deck built to play at the table.
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