Reading time: 4 min
Key Takeaways
- Edna Mode Epic is an undervalued collector gem with a fan-favorite character and solid gameplay utility.
- Zipper Enchanted taps into the passionate Disney Afternoon audience, currently flying under the radar.
- Milo Thatch and Touch the Sky Enchanteds offer rare opportunities from cult-classic films, priced well below their potential.
Edna Mode – Fashion Designer #209 (Epic)
No sugarcoating: Edna Mode is the most obvious miss in the entire set. She’s quotable, iconic, and the kind of personality that drives irrational collector demand the moment she shows up in full art. Her Epic alternate art, illustrated by Stefano Spagnuolo, features the frameless, rainbow foil treatment that makes this rarity tier so visually distinct in person.
On the gameplay side, No Capes! bounces a low-cost item back to hand while drawing a card, and Making Supers Fabulous gives your Super characters +1 Lore every time she quests. She’s the glue piece for an Incredibles tribe that will dominate casual tables all year. Epic cards have historically been undervalued at launch before catching up as the collector market matures. Edna Mode is the best argument for getting ahead of that trend right now.
Buy Edna Mode – Fashion Designer on TCGPlayer or eBay
Zipper – Big Helper #235 (Enchanted)
Illustrated by Marcin Karolewski, this Enchanted reimagines the tiny Rescue Rangers fly hero as a Floodborn explorer with sapphire-colored flowers framing the scene and a Gadget cameo tucked in the background. The scale work — a small character against a grand, overgrown landscape — is the kind of compositional trick that makes cards feel alive on the table.
Mechanically, Zipper shifts in for just two ink, and his Buzzing Enthusiasm ability adds his 6 Willpower to another chosen character’s Strength when he quests. Solid board presence at a low cost, but the real story is the collector angle. The Disney Afternoon demographic — people who grew up with DuckTales, Chip ‘n’ Dale, and Rescue Rangers — is one of the most passionate buyer segments in all of Lorcana. Zipper is their card in this set, and the market hasn’t figured that out yet.
Buy Zipper – Big Helper on TCGPlayer or eBay
Milo Thatch – Getting His Hands Dirty #230 (Enchanted)
While the internet celebrates every Toy Story and Incredibles pull, there’s an Enchanted from Atlantis: The Lost Empire sitting quietly in the 230 slot that deserves serious attention. Milo has Ward and Scholar’s Gambit, which lets him bounce a character back to hand on entry, and Practical Knowledge draws you a card at the end of your turn whenever two or more cards hit your discard. Even Ravensburger’s own lead game designer, Levi Dodd, called Milo out specifically in a pre-release interview as a card he expects to open new possibilities for Emerald ink.
Beyond the gameplay case, Atlantis carries one of the most devoted fanbases of any underappreciated Disney film, and these are collectors who have waited years for Milo to get a chase rarity treatment. This card is sitting around $200 while the market has eyes on everything else.
Buy Milo Thatch – Getting His Hands Dirty on TCGPlayer or eBay
Touch the Sky #240 (Enchanted)
The Brave Enchanted is being completely ignored because it sits next to a Toy Story tsunami, and that is a mistake. Viv Tanner’s Lore Nouveau art features Merida scaling a cliffside with the world unfurling behind her in sweeping detail. It’s a poster that belongs framed. The card is sitting around $200, identical to the Mrs. Incredible and Frozone Enchanteds but with a fraction of the social media heat. As the only Enchanted representative of the entire Brave franchise in this set, Touch the Sky holds a monopoly on Merida collector demand. As Brave builds its collector base heading into future sets, this is the card they will all need.
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Kida – Crystal Scion #160 (Legendary)
Kida is the budget dark horse nobody is talking about. This Floodborn Legendary costs eight ink but shifts in for six, carries a 7/7 stat line, and her on-play ability, Flood of Power, lets each player put up to five discarded cards back into their inkwell. In a Sapphire deck built to fuel the graveyard early, that ramp is almost entirely yours to exploit.
Here’s the number that matters: Kida is currently sitting at roughly $2. For a Legendary that launched today, that’s a remarkable floor, especially with the passionate Atlantis collector base behind her and a second Enchanted version at #236 already driving awareness of the character. At the table, this card will become a staple in Sapphire control builds, and the price will follow.
Buy Kida – Crystal Scion on TCGPlayer or eBay
Let’s break it down: every set has these sleeper cards that spike months later. If you’re looking to build a collection with real long-term value, these five Wilds Unknown cards are where you should put your focus right now. Happy hunting, and may your pulls be pristine.


