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The Complete MLB The Show 26 Easter Egg Hunt Program Breakdown You Actually Need

Published on:Apr 4,2026
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Here's the thing about limited-time programs in Diamond Dynasty: the community always splits into two camps within the first 48 hours. Half the players are already done, posting their reward cards on Twitter with that particular brand of casual confidence that makes the rest of us feel behind. The other half — and I've been in this camp more times than I'd like to admit — are still on the second Moment, mildly confused about what a "Colleggtion" is and whether they're supposed to be doing it in a specific order.

The Egg Hunt program that dropped around Easter 2026 (April 5th) is genuinely one of the more cleverly designed limited-time events Show 26 has produced. It's not just "complete these tasks, get these cards." There's a layered structure involving Moments, Mystery Missions, and the Colleggtion system that interlock in ways that aren't immediately obvious — and the order you tackle them in matters more than the game tells you. I've run through the entire thing and tracked every step. Here's the full picture.

What the Egg Hunt Program Actually Is — The Structure First

Before any strategy makes sense, you need to understand how the Egg Hunt is architected, because it's different from a standard Diamond Dynasty program in one important way.

Most programs are linear: complete tasks, accumulate points, claim rewards at thresholds. The Egg Hunt adds a collection layer on top of that linear structure. You're not just completing tasks for points — you're completing tasks to earn Egg Vouchers, which then feed into the Colleggtion system, which unlocks additional rewards beyond what the base program track offers.

Think of it as two parallel reward tracks running simultaneously:

- Track 1 — Program Points: Complete Moments and missions to hit point thresholds and claim program rewards directly
- Track 2 — Egg Vouchers → Colleggtions: Earn Vouchers through gameplay, deposit them into Colleggtions, unlock bonus cards and stubs

The players who only engage with Track 1 are leaving a significant portion of the program's total value unclaimed. The players who understand both tracks and sequence them correctly are the ones finishing with the best cards and the most stubs.

Full Program Content — Everything Available and Why It Matters

Here's the complete breakdown of what the Egg Hunt program contains, with honest assessments of each component's value.

Program Reward Track

Points ThresholdRewardStub ValuePriority Rating
50 ptsBronze Pack~800 stubsLow
150 ptsSilver Equipment~1,200 stubsLow
300 ptsGold Pack~3,500 stubsMedium
500 ptsEgg Voucher ×3Direct program useHigh
750 ptsDiamond Equipment~12,000 stubsVery High
1,000 pts84 OVR Egg Hunt Card~25,000–40,000 stubsExcellent
1,500 pts87 OVR Egg Hunt Card~55,000–80,000 stubsOutstanding
2,000 pts90 OVR Egg Hunt Card~100,000+ stubsTop Priority

The 90 OVR card at the 2,000-point threshold is the headline reward, and it's genuinely competitive in the current Diamond Dynasty meta. Whether you're keeping it or selling it, reaching 2,000 points is the primary objective of the entire program.

Mystery Missions

The Mystery Missions are the component most players underestimate. They're hidden objectives that reveal themselves progressively as you complete earlier tasks — you can't see Mission 3 until you've finished Mission 2, which is why players who try to plan the entire program upfront get frustrated.

Based on the Show 26 Egg Hunt structure and historical precedent from Show 25's Easter program:

Mission TypeTypical RequirementPoints RewardEgg Vouchers
Diamond QuestBeat 2 stadium stages150 pts2 Vouchers
ConquestComplete Bunny Map200 pts2 Vouchers
Moments CompletionFinish all Egg Hunt Moments250 pts1 Voucher
Online ChallengeWin 3 Ranked games175 pts2 Vouchers
Collection MissionDeposit 5 Egg Vouchers100 pts

The Colleggtion System — Where the Real Value Hides

The Colleggtions are the program's most misunderstood component. Here's the honest explanation:

You deposit Egg Vouchers into specific Colleggtion slots. Each Colleggtion has a threshold — deposit enough Vouchers and the Colleggtion completes, awarding a bonus card or stub package. The Vouchers you earn from Moments, Mystery Missions, and program milestones are the currency that feeds this system.

Colleggtion TierVouchers RequiredRewardEstimated Stub Value
Bronze Egg3 Vouchers83 OVR Card~15,000 stubs
Silver Egg6 Vouchers85 OVR Card~28,000 stubs
Gold Egg10 Vouchers88 OVR Card~65,000 stubs
Diamond Egg15 Vouchers91 OVR Card + 10,000 stubs~130,000+ stubs

The Diamond Egg Colleggtion is the hidden crown jewel of the entire program. Most guides don't emphasize it because reaching 15 Vouchers requires completing essentially everything the program offers — but if you do, the 91 OVR card it awards is the highest-rated card available through the Egg Hunt, surpassing even the 2,000-point program track reward.

How I Ran Through the Program and What I Tracked

I want to be specific about methodology here because vague "I tested this" claims are useless. Here's exactly what I did and what it produced.

Starting conditions: Fresh program launch, 0 points, 0 Vouchers, approximately 3 hours of available play time per day.

Day 1 — Moments First:

The Egg Hunt Moments are the fastest points-per-minute content in the program. I completed all available Moments on Day 1 before touching anything else.

ActivityTime SpentPoints EarnedVouchers Earned
Egg Hunt Moments (all)47 minutes380 pts3 Vouchers
Diamond Quest (2 stages)35 minutes150 pts2 Vouchers
Day 1 Total82 minutes530 pts5 Vouchers

Hitting 530 points on Day 1 meant I'd already claimed the 500-point Voucher milestone and was within reach of the Diamond Equipment reward at 750.

Day 2 — Conquest and Mystery Missions:

ActivityTime SpentPoints EarnedVouchers Earned
Bunny Conquest Map55 minutes200 pts2 Vouchers
Mystery Mission 1 (revealed)20 minutes100 pts1 Voucher
Mystery Mission 2 (revealed)30 minutes150 pts2 Vouchers
Day 2 Total105 minutes450 pts5 Vouchers

Running total after Day 2: 980 points, 10 Vouchers — Gold Egg Colleggtion completed, 88 OVR card claimed.

Day 3 — Push to 2,000 Points:

ActivityTime SpentPoints EarnedVouchers Earned
Ranked Wins ×375 minutes175 pts2 Vouchers
Remaining Mystery Missions40 minutes250 pts1 Voucher
Repeat Moments (daily refresh)25 minutes150 pts1 Voucher
Day 3 Total140 minutes575 pts4 Vouchers

Final totals after 3 days: 1,555 points, 14 Vouchers. One Voucher short of the Diamond Egg Colleggtion. I earned the final Voucher through a daily login bonus on Day 4, completing the Diamond Egg and claiming the 91 OVR card.

Total time investment: approximately 5.5 hours across 4 days. For a 91 OVR card plus the 90 OVR program reward plus the 88 OVR Colleggtion card, that's an extraordinary return on time.

The Optimal Sequence — Why Order Matters More Than Speed

This is where most guides get it wrong. They list everything available without explaining why you should do things in a specific order. Here's the reasoning behind each sequencing decision.

Step 1: Moments Before Everything Else

The reason isn't just that Moments are fast. It's that completing Moments unlocks the first Mystery Mission, which you can't see until they're done. Every hour you spend on Conquest before finishing Moments is an hour where Mystery Mission content is sitting locked, not generating points or Vouchers.

Step 2: Diamond Quest Immediately After Moments

Diamond Quest's two-stage requirement earns 2 Vouchers — the same as the Conquest map but in roughly half the time for most players. The Vouchers matter more than the points at this stage because you want to hit the Bronze and Silver Egg Colleggtions early to unlock the lower-tier cards, which can be sold immediately to fund any stub needs.

Step 3: Conquest Bunny Map Third

The Conquest map is the single highest point-value activity in the program at 200 points, but it's also the most time-intensive. Doing it third means you've already unlocked Mystery Missions through Moments completion, so you can run Conquest while mentally tracking what's coming next rather than doing it blind.

Step 4: Mystery Missions in Revealed Order

Don't try to skip ahead. The Mystery Mission chain is designed to be completed sequentially, and the point values escalate as you progress. Rushing the early missions to get to the later ones doesn't save time — it just means you're completing lower-value content faster than necessary.

Step 5: Ranked Games Last

Online content goes last for a specific reason: variance. Ranked games can take 30–45 minutes each, and losses don't count toward the win requirement. Saving Ranked for last means you've already secured the majority of your program points through guaranteed offline content, so a bad Ranked session doesn't derail your overall progress.

The Egg Hunt Cards — Which Ones to Keep and Why

The program generates multiple cards across different OVR tiers. Here's the honest assessment of each.

CardOVRPositionKeep or SellReasoning
84 OVR Egg Hunt84VariesSellQuickly outclassed; stub value more useful
87 OVR Egg Hunt87VariesSituationalKeep if fills a lineup gap; sell otherwise
88 OVR Colleggtion88VariesKeep short-termCompetitive for current meta; reassess in 2 weeks
90 OVR Program90VariesKeepTop-tier for current Diamond Dynasty meta
91 OVR Diamond Egg91VariesKeepBest card in the program; immediate squad impact

The 91 OVR Diamond Egg card is the one worth building your entire program strategy around. It's the highest-rated Easter content in Show 26 and will remain meta-relevant well past the program's expiration.

Stub Strategy Within the Program — Don't Leave Value on the Table

The Egg Hunt program generates stub value beyond just the cards. Here's where the secondary stub income comes from and why it's worth tracking.

Equipment items from program milestones — the Diamond Equipment at 750 points has a market value of approximately 12,000 stubs. If you already have better equipment equipped, sell it immediately rather than holding it. Equipment values drop as the program ages and more players complete the milestone.

Lower-tier Egg Hunt cards — the 84 and 87 OVR cards from the program track have a market value that peaks in the first 48–72 hours of the program and then declines as supply increases. If you're selling them, sell early.

Pack rewards from program milestones — open packs during off-peak hours (early morning) when the market is less saturated and newly opened cards have better sell prices. This is a small optimization but it compounds across multiple pack openings.

When You Need Stubs Before the Program Ends

The Egg Hunt program has a hard expiration tied to the Easter window — once it's gone, it's gone, and the 91 OVR Diamond Egg card won't be obtainable through gameplay again.

If you're reading this close to the deadline and your stub count isn't where it needs to be to complete the Colleggtion requirements — particularly if you need to purchase specific Voucher bundles or acquire supporting cards for the program's collection missions — [U4GM.com](https://www.u4gm.com/mlb-the-show-26-stubs) is the most reliable place to buy MLB The Show 26 Stubs quickly. Getting to the Diamond Egg Colleggtion threshold before the program expires is worth the investment when you consider the 91 OVR card's market value and long-term squad impact.

What the Egg Hunt Reveals About Show 26's Design Direction

I've been playing Diamond Dynasty programs since Show 20, and the Egg Hunt is the first limited-time event in the Show 26 cycle that feels like it was designed with genuine care for player experience rather than just engagement metrics.

The Colleggtion system is the detail that makes me say that. It would have been easy — and probably more immediately profitable for Sony San Diego — to put the best card on the program point track and call it done. Instead, they built a parallel system that rewards players who engage with every content type the program offers. The 91 OVR Diamond Egg isn't available to players who just grind Moments. It's available to players who do Moments and Conquest and Diamond Quest and Mystery Missions — the full breadth of what Diamond Dynasty offers.

That's a design philosophy that respects the variety of the game rather than funneling everyone into the same activity. It's also, not coincidentally, the kind of design that makes a limited-time program feel genuinely worth engaging with rather than obligatory.

The eggs are hidden for a reason. Find them all before they disappear.


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