Miku Secret Lair mis-ship turns into $10,000 Commander deck listing
A sealed Miku Secret Lair meant for a Goblin Storm buyer hit over $10,000 on eBay after a mis-ship. The listing jumped from $500 to $3,051 after 36 bids first.

A sealed Hatsune Miku Secret Lair Commander deck meant for a Goblin Storm buyer has become a five-figure eBay listing, turning a packing error into instant Commander finance fuel. The mis-shipped deck first surfaced with bidding at $500, climbed to $3,051 after 36 bids, and later passed $10,000 as collectors chased an unopened copy.
Secret Lair Commander Deck: Goblin Storm launched on May 18, 2026 at 9 a.m. PST and was sold only through Secret Lair’s storefront, with a limit of one per customer. Wizards described the 100-card precon, built by Studio X’s Eli Rice and Carmen Klomparens, as a goblin-storm deck, and it sold out in just 34 minutes. Within hours, relists were already in the hundreds of dollars, showing how quickly scarcity can push a Commander product from retail into speculation.

The Miku error has only sharpened the focus on Wizards’ fulfillment and release model. Dakota Cates, the artist behind Goblin Storm who signs his work as Wizard of Barge, criticized Wizards’ handling of Secret Lair scarcity and the way scalpers seized on the drop, noting that he could not even buy a copy of his own deck. For Commander collectors, that frustration now sits beside a sealed mis-ship that looks less like a shipping accident and more like a lottery ticket.

The mistake also echoes an earlier Secret Lair mix-up in March 2026, when some Dandan buyers reportedly received Goblin Storm instead. In this newer case, the Hatsune Miku deck is a complete 100-card green-white Commander deck themed around the Vocaloid character Hatsune Miku, and the leak appeared at the end of May after a customer received it instead of Goblin Storm and listed it on eBay. When a single fulfillment slip can turn into a $10,000 listing, Commander collectors are left watching not just for the cards, but for Wizards’ next move.
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.
Did this article answer your question?


