Disney Lorcanahas lots of sets under its belt, which means keeping track of which card debuted in which set can be tricky. It’s important, though, as it’s the easiest way to keep your collection nice and organised.

Fortunately, working out the set a card is from is easy, as it’s all printed on the card if you know where to look.

Anna, Ensnared Sister with the set code circled in Disney Lorcana.

How To Identify What Set A Lorcana Card Is From

To work out the set a Lorcana card was printed in, look at thebottom left corner of the card. There, you’ll see four pieces of information: theartist,collector number, the language, and the set number.

That last number is the important one, aseach Lorcana set is numbered. If you already know what order the sets launched in, working this out is easy:The First Chapter has a “1”, Rise Of The Floodborn has “2”, and so on.

Lorcana Robin Hood, Mickey, and Stitch

There is one important caveat to this: this number showswhen the card made its debut, not the specific product that individual card was pulled from. To prevent scalping of first-edition cards, it isimpossible to tell if a card is a reprint,unless it has been errata’d and had its text changed between printings.

Cards from theIllumineer’s Quest scenario deckshave their own set codes, which will start with the letter Q. For instance, despite launching alongside the fourth set, cards fromDeep Trouble, the first Illumineer’s Quest, have the set code Q1.

Every Lorcana Set Number

Once you’ve found the card’s set number, it’s simply a matter offinding the set it corrosponds to.

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

Fabled

9

Italic entries are assumed following the numbering conventions introduced in The First Chapter, as they have not yet been released,