RELEASE
Reported starter Cash or pack reward. Exact amount needs in-game confirmation.

Updated 2026-06-30 - Roblox page, code trackers, tier-list searches, pack guides, and source-status terms rechecked on June 30, 2026
Track Anime Card Collection codes, compare card and mutation priorities, and plan which packs to open before spending Cash in Roblox.
Anime Card Collection Wiki is an unofficial fan-made resource. Roblox and the game creators remain the source of record for official support and purchases.
Codes are the highest-repeat Roblox search intent, so the homepage surfaces the latest verified set and sends players into the dedicated codes page.
Reported starter Cash or pack reward. Exact amount needs in-game confirmation.
Reported compensation reward for early issues.
Reported update reward tied to early pack and collection progression.
Reported small Cash boost for new collectors.
Start with the strongest current picks, then use the full tier list when you need ranking notes, substitutes, and update dates.
Mutation searches repeat around Gold, Emerald, Ruby, Diamond, and Rainbow. Rainbow should be treated as the top income watch item until exact odds and multipliers are tested.
Diamond appears in the repeated mutation ladder and is safer to discuss as a high-value target than as a fixed final multiplier.
Pack-specific searches include high-numbered pack guides, including Pack 44, so late-pack unlocks deserve a dedicated watch lane.
Market, tower, and Star Trial searches show players need help deciding when to shift from opening packs to market and tower goals.
Early players need a safe path: redeem codes, open affordable packs, hold rare cards, then chase mutation value once income grows.
Start with codes, tier list, build planner, and source checks before spending rare resources or committing to a build.
Estimate pack opens, income windows, and when to save for a better pack.
RankingsCompare card, mutation, pack, and market priorities with confidence notes.
CodesTracks reported codes, uncertain rewards, and safe redemption steps.
Source statusClarifies whether an official Trello, Discord, or wiki has been verified.
Use these guides when you need beginner advice, safer upgrade choices, farming routes, or advanced strategy.
Characters, items, maps, clans, units, codes, and puzzle pages should be split into wiki entities when research confirms them.
Use these links and notes to see what is official, what is community reported, and what still needs checking.
Use this page as the source of record for title, creator, live availability, and Roblox-side metadata.
StatusNo official Trello or Discord was verified during this pass, so source-status language stays cautious.
EditorialDocuments which claims are official, community reported, or still awaiting a direct in-game check.
Codes, pack costs, and mutation rankings should show a checked date and avoid final claims when source evidence is mixed.
Split major cards, packs, mutations, and market systems into wiki pages after names and values are verified.
This fan site points players back to official Roblox surfaces for support, purchases, and account issues.
Recent creator videos help players understand gameplay, updates, rankings, and strategy. Treat videos as supporting references, not official patch notes.
Use current walkthroughs to confirm first-session steps, Cash pacing, and unlock order.
YouTubeCompare code videos with tracker pages before moving a code out of Needs check.
YouTubeUse mutation and market videos as leads for testing, not final probability proof.
Quick answers for codes, sources, rankings, and the next page to check.
Anime Card Collection Wiki is a fan-made Roblox resource for codes, card tier notes, pack planning, mutation decisions, and source-checked guides.
No. This is an unofficial fan site. Use the official Roblox page and creator-owned channels for official support, purchases, moderation, and account issues.
Check reported codes, open starter packs conservatively, save high-rarity cards, then use source notes before chasing expensive mutations.
The page uses cautious labels when a claim comes from trackers, search snippets, or creator videos rather than an official creator-owned source or direct in-game test.