A Sakura Kuji made for Clear Card Arc fans… with a big nod to the Sakura Cards
This new lottery is called Ichiban Kuji Anime Cardcaptor Sakura Clear Card Arc Charmful Collection, and the concept is crystal clear: Clear Card Arc on the “collection” side, but with items and visuals that also take you straight back to the Sakura Cards era (and even the Clow Cards). It’s exactly where Sakura is after the original series: new cards, new mysteries… while keeping that “staff, incantations, cards” DNA that made the saga so magical.
Prize lineup: every reward, and where it comes from in the anime
Here’s the full rundown of the announced prizes, with direct ties to key moments: transformations, magical staffs, and that “opening” aesthetic that gives you chills from the very first seconds.
- Prize A: Sakura Kinomoto Figure - Sakura Cards Arc (approx. 18 cm)

Here, we’re clearly in the Sakura Cards Arc: the figure recreates the opening outfit from that era, with a super calm “wish/prayer” pose—like a frozen scene from the moment Sakura fully embraces her role after the Clow Cards transform into Sakura Cards. It’s the kind of top-tier fan service (in the best way): not a generic attack pose, but an atmosphere-driven moment focused on emotion and the light breeze around her.
- Prize B: Seal Staff makeup brush (approx. 16 cm)

An everyday item, but based on a pillar of the series: the Seal Staff, the one Sakura uses from the very beginning when she starts capturing the cards. The idea is simple: you’re holding an “iconic Sakura” symbol in your hand, but as a practical accessory. Extra originality because it’s not just a keychain—it’s a “usable” item that keeps the staff’s instantly recognizable silhouette.
- Prize C: “Flight” mug (approx. 8 cm)

A detail for the real ones: the handle is a Flight motif. In the anime, “Flight” is the card that embodies flying, so of course it throws you back to all those scenes where Sakura moves through the sky during her captures. The mug also nods to the idea of activation under the “staff of dreams” (the period when Sakura gets access to more advanced transformations), so it’s an item that clearly blends card iconography with everyday life.
- Prize D: “Cards” compact mirror (6 designs, choice, approx. 6 cm)

This is the heart of the saga turned into an accessory: Clow Cards (the start of the story, when Sakura releases the cards), Sakura Cards (when they take a form tied to her own magic), and Clear Cards (the Clear Card Arc phase, with the new cards and all the mystery that comes with them). The fact that it’s your choice is a real plus: you can pick your favorite arc and rep it as a bag charm/mirror.
- Prize E: Tableware collection (5 designs, choice)

Small plates (approx. 9 cm) and small ramekins (approx. 7.5 cm): it’s exactly the kind of “collection” prize that works because Sakura has always had that everyday vibe (school, home, hanging out) coexisting with magic. And here, you can choose your pieces, so you don’t have to suffer the randomness if you want to match your set to your display corner.
- Prize F: Chibi acrylic stand (11 designs, random, approx. 5 cm)

Big important point here: these are new illustrations (art “recreated” for the Kuji), with a transparent pink background that fits the Clear Card Arc theme perfectly. But it’s random: you pull, you pray, and you find out which character you got. It’s exactly the kind of prize that cranks up the tension when you do multiple draws in a row.
- Prize G: Stationery collection (8 designs, choice)

Notebooks (approx. 16 cm) and stickers (approx. 5 cm, set of 6): this is the prize that lets you keep memorable scenes close, not just symbols. The stickers cover Clow Cards, Sakura Cards, and Clear Cards—basically a mini best-of of “card” moments across the arcs. And since it’s your choice, you can aim for the visuals that hit you the hardest.
- Prize H: Rubber collection (7 designs, choice)

Coasters (approx. 9 cm) and charms (approx. 5 cm) featuring Sakura’s silhouette and magical staffs. It’s simple, clean, and it lands perfectly: the silhouette is the kind of design that instantly screams “Sakura” without overloading it. And since it’s your choice, you can build your set (home, office, bag) without frustrating duplicates.
- Last One: Sakura Kinomoto Figure - Sakura Cards Arc Last One version (approx. 18 cm)

Same base as Prize A (opening outfit from the Sakura Cards Arc), but the difference is in the expression: this version has a gentle smile meant to convey Sakura at her purest—the one we see when she acts without hesitation to protect others. And since it’s the Last One, it literally drops when the box is emptied: it’s the Kuji’s “clutch moment.”
- Double Chance: Last One version of the Sakura Kinomoto figure (30 winners)

The Double Chance campaign gives you another way in to the same reward as the Last One: the “Last One version” figure (approx. 18 cm). Only 30 copies are announced across all sales (in-store + online), so clearly: if you want that specific expression, this is the “extra shot at it” you shouldn’t ignore.
Practical info to note: 750 yen per draw (tax included). In-store release on March 28, 2026 (rolling launch), and online launch on March 31, 2026 at 11:00.
The Double Chance campaign runs from release until late June 2026. And as always with this kind of lottery: it’s while supplies last, so if you’re aiming for the figure (Prize A or Last One), keep an eye on the timing.
In short: Ichiban Kuji Anime Cardcaptor Sakura Clear Card Arc Charmful Collection checks every box—Clear Card Arc for the theme, and a Sakura Cards Arc figure as the centerpiece. If you’re a fan of the “Clow Cards → Sakura Cards → Clear Cards” evolution, this Kuji is literally made for you.