Disney Lorcana Identification & AI Grading
Disney Lorcana is the first major TCG built by Ravensburger and Disney. The game uses ink-cost mechanics and features beloved characters in standard, foil, and enchanted treatments.
Grade Lorcana CardsHistory & Market Context
Lorcana was announced in 2022 and released in 2023 as a competitive TCG and Disney collectibles crossover. The First Chapter introduced six ink colors and the enchanted rarity, a textured foil treatment that immediately became the chase. The game has seen strong sellouts and a growing tournament scene.
The Floodborn set added location cards and the floodborn keyword, while Ursula's Return and Azurite Sea expanded the card pool. Lorcana is graded primarily by PSA and CGC, with enchanted cards and legendary characters commanding the highest prices in gem grades.
The First Chapter
Launch set. Mickey Mouse and Elsa enchanted cards lead.
Rise of the Floodborn
Introduced location cards and floodborn keyword.
Ursula's Return
Amethyst and action-focused expansion.
Azurite Sea
Pirate and action-heavy set.
Enchanted Rares
Textured foil chase cards in every set.
Artists, Sets & Design
Lorcana art is produced by Disney-approved and freelance illustrators. Enchanted cards use a unique foil texture and alternate framing. Character designs stay true to Disney animation while adapting to TCG dimensions.
Card layout is clean: ink cost top-left, name, strength/willpower, type, lore, and abilities. Inkwell colors are amber, amethyst, emerald, ruby, sapphire, and steel. Rarity is shown by the bottom-left symbol, with legendary and enchanted cards using special holofoil.
What Our AI Identifies
Upload a photo and PreGradeCards AI will analyze the card for the same four pillars professional graders use:
- Character, action, item, song, and location types
- Ink color, cost, and card number
- Common, uncommon, rare, super rare, legendary, enchanted
- Foil and non-foil versions
- Set code and language
Grading Deep Dive
Condition factors specific to Lorcana cards:
- Enchanted cards have textured foil that scratches
- Floodborn foils show roller marks
- Inkwell borders can hide whitening at first glance
- First-chapter centering was inconsistent on early prints
- Legendary cards are graded more strictly than commons