Lorcana Wilds Unknown Set Review: Is It Worth Opening in Australia?

Wilds Unknown is Lorcana Set 12. We opened four booster boxes and tracked every card. Here is the pull rate data, the standout singles, and an honest answer to whether opening boxes makes financial sense in Australia right now.

This post contains affiliate links. If you buy through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Quick Answer

Wilds Unknown is the twelfth Lorcana set, and it covers an adventure-focused card pool featuring Encanto, Brave, The Incredibles, Rescue Rangers, Atlantis, and Toy Story characters alongside familiar faces from Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, and Robin Hood. See current prices at /cards/lorcana.

Wilds Unknown is the twelfth Lorcana set, and it covers an adventure-focused card pool featuring Encanto, Brave, The Incredibles, Rescue Rangers, Atlantis, and Toy Story characters alongside familiar faces from Snow White, Sleeping Beauty, and Robin Hood.

We opened four booster boxes of Wilds Unknown to build our singles inventory. Before we get into opinion, here is the actual data.


The Numbers

Base set size: 204 cards (plus Epic variants numbered above 204)

Cards per pack: 12

Packs per box: 24

Total cards per box: 288

Expected cards from 4 boxes: 1,152

Cards we listed as singles: 1,077

Unlisted gap (art/insert cards): 75 cards

Foils observed: 99 across 1,077 listed cards, which is essentially one foil per pack as the stated structure guarantees.

Epic cards pulled: 9 across 96 packs


What Is In Every Wilds Unknown Pack

The standard Lorcana booster structure across all sets: 6 commons, 3 uncommons, 2 rares or super rares, 1 foil of any rarity. The foil slot is guaranteed on every pack. The Epic rarity (Lorcana's ultra-rare tier) appears at a rate of roughly 1 in 8 to 1 in 12 packs based on observed data.

Our 9 Epics from 96 packs sits at roughly 1 in 10.7 packs, which is within the expected range.


The Epic Cards We Pulled

The Epics from Wilds Unknown are the Raised Foil versions of existing cards, numbered above 204. We pulled:

Nine Epics from four boxes is a solid result. The spread across characters is reasonable given the randomised distribution.


Standout Cards in Wilds Unknown

Wilds Unknown adds Encanto to the Lorcana roster in a big way. The Madrigal family features heavily: Mirabel, Bruno, Isabela, Luisa, Julieta, Pepa, and Alma all have multiple versions. For collectors who play or grew up with Encanto, this set has significant personal appeal beyond card value.

Atlantis is new to Lorcana in this set. Kida, Milo Thatch, Helga Sinclair, Lyle Rourke, and Mole are all included. Atlantis has a devoted fanbase and the cards reflect that affection in the artwork.

Sid's Toys from Toy Story are a fun subtheme: Babyhead, Bouncing Ducky, Jingle Joe, Roller Bob, Wind-Up Frog, Hand-in-the-Box, and Pterodactyl Janie Doll all appear as cards. For players who grew up with the original Toy Story this is a nostalgia hit.

The Brave character spread includes Merida, Angus, Elinor, Fergus, the three brothers, and supporting characters. The DunBroch family mix appears as an item card.

Chip and Dale's Rescue Rangers make their Lorcana debut with Chip, Dale, Gadget, Zipper, Fat Cat, and Rat Capone all included.


The Roundtable: Six Perspectives on Wilds Unknown

Maya (market and investment): The foil guarantee of one per pack is a core feature of the Lorcana value proposition. Our data from four boxes confirmed this at 99 foils from 96 packs, which is essentially exact. The Epic pull rate at roughly 1 per 10-11 packs is meaningful information for anyone doing sealed EV calculations. At current AU box prices, if you value the Epics at market rate and add average foil value, the EV math sits close to box price rather than above it, which is consistent with most healthy TCG sealed markets.

Dan (competitive player): Wilds Unknown has mechanical variety. The Encanto cards introduce some interesting synergies around the Madrigal family that competitive players are exploring. Bruno's vision-based abilities are genuinely different from what Lorcana has done before.

Priya (community): The IP selection in this set is unusual in a positive way. Encanto is recent, The Incredibles is beloved, Atlantis has a passionate fanbase. Wilds Unknown feels like a set that was designed for specific collector communities, not just the broadest possible Disney audience. That focus will drive personal connection to the cards.

Sam (singles focus): Buy the singles you want. That is the answer for 90% of people. If you specifically want the Edna Mode Epic or the Bruno Epic or the Kida Epic, the cost of buying that single card is significantly less than the expected cost of opening packs to hit it. Nine Epics from 96 packs is good luck. Most players opening one or two boxes should expect fewer.

Ren (new Lorcana player): I bought two packs of Wilds Unknown to try the set before committing to a box. I got a Merida foil and a Luisa card which made me very happy. I appreciate that the set has recognisable Disney characters without being entirely Frozen and Moana again.

Kai (contrarian): The gap between box price and EV is not a reason not to open boxes. Every pack of any TCG is a guaranteed loss on pure EV basis. You open boxes because you enjoy it, because you want the experience, or because you want to build a singles inventory. Anyone framing sealed TCG purchases purely as an investment decision is setting themselves up for disappointment.


Should You Open or Buy Singles?

This is the question we will answer properly in our full Wilds Unknown EV Calculator once the Pokemon and Lorcana calculators are live. The short version:

Opening boxes makes sense if you want the full opening experience, you want a broad collection across the set, or you are building a store inventory.

Buying singles makes sense if you want specific cards, specific characters, or specific Epics.

Both are valid. The data we have from four boxes gives you an honest picture of what to expect if you go the sealed route.


Where to Buy Wilds Unknown Singles in Australia

Over 1,077 individual Wilds Unknown cards are listed at the C3 eBay store. We have both regular and foil versions of most cards in the set, and the nine Epic cards we pulled are listed individually.

For pull rate detail from our full four-box opening, see the companion post: I Opened 4 Boxes of Lorcana Wilds Unknown.


Disney Lorcana is published by Ravensburger. All character names and images are trademarks of The Walt Disney Company. Cards on Cards on Cards is an independent Australian TCG retailer and is not affiliated with Ravensburger or The Walt Disney Company.

The C3 Take

The decisions you make with your TCG collection matter more than most guides suggest. Whether you are buying, selling, or holding, the difference between a good outcome and a poor one almost always comes down to checking current AUD prices before you act. Use the live data at /cards/lorcana to make price-informed decisions every time.

What to Read Next

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Lorcana Wilds Unknown worth opening in Australia?

Based on our four-box opening, the set has strong EV driven by Enchanted and Epic rarity cards. The first appearances of Pixar characters (The Incredibles, Toy Story, Brave) drove collector demand above typical set levels. Use the C3 EV Calculator at your current purchase price for a precise verdict.

What is an Epic rarity card in Wilds Unknown?

Wilds Unknown introduced Epics as the first new rarity in Lorcana's history. They are Raised Foil variants numbered above 204 and appear at approximately one per ten packs. From our four-box opening we pulled nine Epics.

Where can I buy Wilds Unknown singles in Australia?

Singles including Enchanted and Epic variants are available at the C3 eBay store. Check current AUD prices at the C3 Lorcana Card Vault.

Was this guide helpful?
← Back to Blog Browse TCG Shop →

Share Your Feedback

Help us build a better site for the Australian TCG community.