Last updated on July 7, 2026

Finale of Devastation | Illustration by Bayard Wu
One of Commanderโs biggest green staples is slated for two Secret Lair reprints: Finale of Devastation will be reprinted in the upcoming Hatsune Miku Secret Lair Commander deck and the recently announced print-to-demand Secret Lair x Global Fund for Women: Their Magic is Limitless.


Left Source: Reddit.com / Right Source: Wizards.com
Their Magic is Limitless will be available on the Secret Lair website from July 20-August 3. The release date for Hatsune Miku is currently unknown; we only know about the deck because it was leaked. Wizards has not released an official announcement about it, but player speculation is that it will release this year.
The Finale reprint is big news as the rarely reprinted green mythic is one of the colorโs best cards in Commander and fetches a high price because of how easily it fits into any green deck.
Finale of Devastation Prints






Currently, Finale only has three printings: Its debut print in War of the Spark, a mini-reprint in Throne of Eldraine promo packs with a planeswalker stamp, and a reprint in Commander Masters, which had the same art as WAR, a foiled etched treatment, and borderless art. The TCGplayer market prices for each edition are as follows at the time of writing:
- WAR: $52
- WAR Prerelease: $64
- ELD: $44
- CMM Base: $52
- CMM Borderless: $77
- CMM Foil Etched: $92
Finale of Devastation in Commander

Kinnan, Bonder Prodigy | Illustration by Jason Rainville
Per EDHREC, Finale of Devastation is played in 7.4% of eligible decksโthatโs 320,000 of 4.3 million decks. It is the second most-played green creature tutor, topped only by Worldly Tutor with a 12% inclusion rate. Finale is definitely weaker than Worldly Tutor (thereโs a reason oneโs on the Game Changer list and the other isnโt) but thatโs still good company.
Finale sees the most play in decks led by Kinnan, Bonder Prodigy (72% inclusion rate) and the partner combinations Tymna the Weaver/Thrasios, Triton Hero (74% inclusion rate) and Rograkh, Son of Rohgahh/Thrasios, Triton Hero (79% inclusion rate). Fun fact: These are cEDH commanders! Well, Kinnan isnโt always cEDH, but the partners certainly are. That hopefully gives you an idea of the cardโs power.
Why Is Finale of Devastation So Good?

Devoted Druid | Illustration by Kimonas Theodossiou
Finale of Devastation sees play at the highest levels of Commander because of its flexibility, though it isnโt so overwhelmingly powerful that lower Bracket decks should avoid it.
The first layer is a tutor that puts your chosen creature directly into play, in the vein of Chord of Calling and Green Sun's Zenith. Tutors give you access to the best card for any given situation. That might be a creature-based answer like Collector Ouphe or Drannith Magistrate to prevent your opponents from going off or a key threatโmaybe a Devoted Druid for a combo kill or Phantasmal Image for shenanigans.
Tutors being strong is nothing new; theyโre wonderful at any power level because they make your deck more consistent. But Finale has a few quirks. Firstly, since it puts the creature directly into play, your opponents have less information to act on. If you Worldly Tutor for Collector Ouphe, your opponents know when they need interaction up. But a Finale of Devastation on the stack has ambiguity you can leverage to your advantage. It also searches your graveyard for a target, so it doubles as a reanimation spell, an effect you almost never see on green cards (Invasion of Ikoria is similar).
Finale also sees play because it has another mode: If you spend 10+ mana, your creatures get a power boost and haste, so it finishes the game as a mass pump spell. Looking at high-powered games, thatโs the perfect balance of payoff and setup: You can tutor for the Devoted Druid to establish an infinite mana combo or use Finale as a mana sink. Cards with multiple uses makes singleton decks more powerful by giving them more options per card slot; if you consider this card a tutor, a recursion spell, and a mass pump effect, then Finale of Devastation fulfills three roles but only costs one card slot.
If these Secret Lair reprints drive the price down, more players can access this flexibility, which can only make Commander better. And for what it's worth, the Global Fund for Women Secret Lair will be print-to-demand, so you can't miss out on this one if you're really itching for a copy.
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