Rugged Commander Deck Box with Display Window
Print Profile(1)

Description
Hardware needed:
3x M3x30 machine screw for the back hinge
I’ve wanted to design my own Commander deck box for a long time because a lot of the ones I’ve tried or printed always felt like they missed something—too tight, too loose, gimmicky, or just not built for regular use. I finally sat down and designed one from the ground up with those frustrations in mind.
This box is designed to hold a full 100-card double-sleeved Commander deck, with enough extra room for tokens without compressing the cards. The fit is intentional: snug enough to keep everything in place, but not so tight that you’re fighting it every time you pull your deck out.
One feature I really wanted was a dedicated commander window. The front display is sized for a standard plastic top loader, so your commander (or favorite card) stays visible and protected, and can be swapped out easily.
The lid uses a mechanical latch instead of magnets. I wanted something simple, reliable, and durable. The latch has been solid in backpacks and bags during transport, which was one of my main goals.
The design is intentionally plain and utility-focused. No texture or decoration yet—just clean geometry and thicker walls where it matters. It’s printed in PLA and designed to print reliably on most machines without tricks or post-processing.
Please print it, use it, and let me know what you think:
- What works well?
- What feels awkward or unnecessary?
- What do you wish it did differently?
- Any features you’d want added in a future version?
License
You may create derivative works based on this object, provided that all such derivative works are published exclusively on the MakerWorld platform and include proper attribution to the original creator. You may not share, upload, host, distribute, or publish this object—or any derivative work of this object—on any other digital platform, marketplace, or distribution channel. Commercial use of this object and any derivative works is strictly prohibited. This includes, but is not limited to, selling, renting, sublicensing, or using the object in any context in which you receive monetary compensation or other financial benefits.
























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