Unlocking the Vault: A Guide to Baldur’s Gate 3 Treasure Packs

Baldur’s Gate 3 already lives at many D&D tables through character builds, party drama, and players whispering “I can fix him” about Astarion. Now, Sirius Dice is ensuring the game lives there as physical hardware, too.

In early 2026, Sirius Dice announced the Baldur’s Gate 3 Treasure Packs—a series of blind “treasure” envelopes built around a simple, addictive loop: open, roll, trade, repeat. Framed as a collaboration between Hasbro, Wizards of the Coast, and Larian Studios, these packs are the latest entry in Sirius’s successful “Treasure Pack” product line.

Each pack aims for the same dopamine hit the digital game delivers when a chest pops and you don’t yet know if you’ve struck gold or pulled another pair of vendor-trash gloves. The difference is that this time, your loot lands directly in your physical dice tray.

What’s Inside a Treasure Pack?

Sirius keeps the contents consistent across the board. Every pack is guaranteed to include three specific items:

  • One Oversized D20: These heavy-duty dice feature custom iconography instead of a standard “20.”

  • One Collectible Metal Coin: Each coin is character-focused, featuring engravings of icons like Gale, Astarion, or the Dark Urge.

  • One Embroidered Dice Bag: These microfiber pouches feature iconic flavor text, such as Lae’zel’s blunt “Chk!” or faction symbols.

The variety is surprisingly deep. Sirius has curated a pool of 40 possible D20 designs, 21 unique coins, and 9 different bag designs, making full set completion a true quest for collectors.

The Rarity Ladder: From Common to Artifact

The rarity structure changes how players interact with the product. You aren’t just buying a die; you are pulling from a tiered loot table that dictates trade leverage and secondary market value.

Rarity D20 Designs Examples & Practical Details
Common 20 Faction and creature nods like Illithid, Volo, and Emerald Grove.
Uncommon 11 Story-adjacent references such as Selûnite and Dame Aylin.
Rare 5 Higher-profile pulls including Mizora and the Infernal Engine.
Legendary 3 Top-tier designs: The Wizard of Waterdeep, The Pale Elf, and The Dark Urge.
Artifact 2 The “Chase” tier specifically tied to the Astral Prism.

The headline of the series is the Replica Astral Prism. Lucky buyers can find this premium collectible directly in their packs, though Sirius also utilizes redemption cards for some of the larger prize items. This physical artifact sits outside the usual “die/coin/bag” loop, serving as the “Holy Grail” for dedicated Baldur’s Gate 3 fans.

Physical Packs vs. Digital Deluxe Treasures

It is important to distinguish these physical Sirius Dice packs from the “Treasures from Rivellon” pack found in the Baldur’s Gate 3 Digital Deluxe Edition. While the Sirius packs are for your real-life table, the Digital Deluxe items are in-game equipment inspired by Divinity: Original Sin 2.

The digital bundle includes five specific pieces:

  1. Mask of the Shapeshifter: For race-changing on the fly.

  2. Cape of the Red Prince: A cloak for royal flair.

  3. Lute of the Merryweather Bard: A unique instrument for performers.

  4. Needle of the Outlaw Rogue: A dagger for stealthy builds.

  5. Bicorne of the Sea Beast: Headwear for the nautically inclined.

Why Collectors are Latching On

At a $12.99 MSRP, the entry price is firmly in the “impulse buy” zone. Sirius Dice reported over one million Treasure Packs sold across their various lines, and the Baldur’s Gate 3 edition leverages that momentum.

The blind-bag format builds a specific kind of tension. As reviewers have noted, the randomness creates stories—and occasionally grudges—when you pull duplicate coins instead of that elusive Shadowheart D20. That experience feels very much like Baldur’s Gate 3 itself: a grand power fantasy stapled to the messy, unpredictable nature of probability.

Availability: You can find these packs at Sirius Dice and at local hobby shops, though stock levels fluctuate rapidly due to high demand.

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