Secrets of Strixhaven: Mystical Archive
Secrets of Strixhaven: Mystical Archive
A Collector’s Guide for the Casual and Commander Crowd
Release Date: April 24, 2026
If you have been anywhere near a Magic: The Gathering LGS in the last few weeks, you already know the chatter: Secrets of Strixhaven drops this weekend, and the Mystical Archive is back. Five years after the original Strixhaven: School of Mages gave us one of the most beloved bonus sheets in modern Magic history, Wizards of the Coast has decided to run it back, this time with 65 brand new reprints stacked onto the sheet. For casual players and Commander fans, this is shaping up to be one of the most collectible and genuinely useful sets in years.
This article is not a power-level ranking. It is a look at what is actually going into your binder, what is worth chasing, and where you can find value when the boxes crack open this Friday.
What Is the Mystical Archive, Again?
The Mystical Archive is a bonus sheet of reprinted instants and sorceries from across Magic’s entire history. Every card appears in a brand new borderless frame with fresh art, and every card also has a Japanese alternate-art version with completely different artwork and Japanese text, regardless of what language booster you opened. New this time around is the Silver Scroll foil treatment, a Collector Booster exclusive applied to the Japanese versions, which is already shaping up to be the marquee pull of the set.
The sheet totals 65 new cards: 25 uncommons, 25 rares, and 15 mythics. Combined with the original Strixhaven Mystical Archive, the complete Mystical Archive collection now sits at 128 unique cards, which is a milestone that is already driving binder projects across the community.
Pull Rates and What You Are Paying For
Here is the quick math every collector should have in their head before preordering:
- Play Boosters: 1 Mystical Archive card per pack (30 per box).
- Collector Boosters: 3 to 4 Mystical Archive cards per pack (36 to 48 per box), including at least one Japanese alt-art and a shot at a Silver Scroll foil.
- Japanese-language Play Boosters: every Mystical Archive slot is a Japanese alt-art version.
For casual players, a Play Booster box is the most reasonable entry point. For Commander players who want the fancy versions of their staples, Collector Boosters are where the party is, but they come with the usual Collector Booster price tag. If your goal is a specific card, singles remain the smartest play, which I will circle back to later.
The Chase Cards: Where the Money Lives
Below is a snapshot of some of the most-discussed reprints and their approximate pricing going into release week. Keep in mind that prices will be volatile for the first 30 to 60 days as supply hits the market.
Card Name | Rarity | Est. Price (Regular) | JP Alt-Art |
Force of Will | Mythic | ~$90 | ~$250+ |
Vampiric Tutor | Mythic | ~$35 | ~$120 |
Jeska’s Will | Mythic | ~$25 | ~$260 |
Culling the Weak | Rare | ~$19 | ~$70 |
Pyretic Ritual | Rare | ~$12 | ~$55 |
Glimpse of Nature | Mythic | ~$10 | ~$90 |
Sleight of Hand | Uncommon | ~$4 | ~$90 |
Angel’s Grace | Rare | ~$6 | ~$75 |
A few notes on the heavy hitters:
A few notes on the heavy hitters:
Force of Will
The white whale of the sheet. Force of Will has been stubbornly expensive for over a decade, and while reprints always soften its price, the new borderless treatment is a legitimate upgrade for Commander players who actually cast it. The Japanese alt-art version is almost certainly going to be the most expensive card in the entire set.
Vampiric Tutor
Commander players, this is your card. Vampiric Tutor has become a near-auto-include in black decks, and its reprint history is thin enough that the new art will move. Expect the regular borderless version to settle in the $30 to $40 range, with the Japanese alt-art holding a comfortable premium.
Jeska’s Will
Do not sleep on this one. Jeska’s Will is already a red staple in Commander, and the original printing did not receive a widely available alt-art treatment. Early preorders on the Japanese alt-art are sitting north of $250, and that number may well hold if the card stays as ubiquitous as it currently is.
Culling the Weak and Pyretic Ritual
These are the two reprints that the cEDH and storm-adjacent crowds have been waiting for. Culling the Weak in particular has been stuck in reserved-list-adjacent scarcity for years. Its reprint is a genuine gift, and the $19 price point will likely come down significantly once supply normalizes, which is good news if you just want to play the card.
The Collector’s Angle: What to Actually Buy
If you are a casual or Commander player thinking about where to put your money, here is the practical breakdown:
- Buy a Play Booster box if you want the thrill of cracking packs and do not mind ending up with a random spread of the sheet. You will likely cover the cost of the box in Mystical Archive singles alone, if the rare slot cooperates.
- Buy Collector Boosters only if you specifically want Japanese alt-arts or the Silver Scroll foils. Otherwise the math is brutal.
- Buy singles after week two. The first week is always inflated. Prices typically settle within 14 to 30 days as boxes get cracked and supply floods the market.
- Target the Japanese alt-arts of cards you already play. If you are running Vampiric Tutor in three Commander decks anyway, the bling upgrade becomes a lot more justifiable.
Long-Term Outlook: Will These Hold Value?
The original Strixhaven Mystical Archive is the best case study we have. Five years after release, the chase cards from that sheet (Jeska’s Will, Demonic Tutor, Mystical Tutor, Opt of all things) have held or appreciated, especially the Japanese alt-arts. The cards that retained the most value were the ones with ongoing Commander demand and limited reprint supply, which is exactly the profile of most of the headliners in this new sheet.
That said, a few things to keep in mind. Wizards has been much more aggressive with bonus sheets and special treatments since 2021, which means the novelty factor is lower. Regular borderless versions will probably not appreciate the way the 2021 versions did. The Japanese alt-arts and Silver Scroll foils are a different story, since those are capped-supply products and tend to be the true long-term holds.
Final Thoughts
Secrets of Strixhaven is shaping up to be one of the most collector-friendly sets of 2026. For casual and Commander players, the Mystical Archive is the headline, and it delivers cards that you will actually want to sleeve up and play. The pricing landscape will be chaotic for the first couple of weeks, so be patient, focus on the cards you actually need, and consider the Japanese alt-arts as your bling upgrade path rather than a pack-cracking lottery.
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May 10, 2026 @ 4:42 am
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May 15, 2026 @ 7:45 pm
wish you all the best