Home

Magic: The Gathering's Future Is Filled With Fallout, Assassins, and Adorable Animal Heroes

This is shaping up to be a huge year for Magic: The Gathering, and over the weekend Wizards of the Coast took to Chicago for MagicCon, revealing a look at a ton of new cards on the horizon—including big crossovers like Fallout and Assassin’s Creed, and brand new worlds in the Magic multiverse.

The Fallout set, due out in a few weeks, served as the main bulk of attention as Wizards unveiled cards from across the four Commander decks that are the basis for the set, pulling on not just the more recent games in the franchise, but the early Interplay classics too. Also highlighted was the upcoming crossover with Assassin’s Creed, which will form a more traditional set across pre-constructed starter decks based around the legendary ACII protagonist Ezio and Valhalla’s Eivor, Boosters, and more.

But Magic isn’t all crossovers—at least, not yet. While Wizards has been high on its Beyond subline, the main game is getting a very exciting boost of original cards this year in not one, but two new sets that will explore entirely brand-new settings for Magic’s lore. The first is Outlaws of Thunder, out in April, as Magic dabbles in Western Fantasy in a new plane inspired by classic cowboy fiction. The other is Bloomburrow, due out in August, which will whisk players into a setting with no human characters at all—only cute, anthropomorphic creatures, living their best Redwall life.

Click through to see tons of cards from Fallout, Assassin’s Creed, Outlaws of Thunder, Bloomburrow, and the third Modern Horizons set—bringing back classic cards and mechanics for the Modern format. And we mean tons!

2 / 159

3 / 159

4 / 159

5 / 159

6 / 159

7 / 159

8 / 159

9 / 159

10 / 159

11 / 159

12 / 159

13 / 159

14 / 159

15 / 159

16 / 159

17 / 159

18 / 159

19 / 159

20 / 159

21 / 159

22 / 159

23 / 159

24 / 159

25 / 159

26 / 159

27 / 159

28 / 159

29 / 159

30 / 159

31 / 159

32 / 159

33 / 159

34 / 159

35 / 159

36 / 159

37 / 159

38 / 159

39 / 159

40 / 159

41 / 159

42 / 159

43 / 159

44 / 159

45 / 159

46 / 159

47 / 159

48 / 159

49 / 159

50 / 159

51 / 159

52 / 159

53 / 159

54 / 159

55 / 159

56 / 159

57 / 159

58 / 159

59 / 159

60 / 159

61 / 159

62 / 159

63 / 159

64 / 159

65 / 159

66 / 159

67 / 159

68 / 159

69 / 159

70 / 159

71 / 159

72 / 159

73 / 159

74 / 159

75 / 159

76 / 159

77 / 159

78 / 159

79 / 159

80 / 159

81 / 159

82 / 159

83 / 159

84 / 159

85 / 159

86 / 159

87 / 159

88 / 159

89 / 159

90 / 159

91 / 159

92 / 159

93 / 159

94 / 159

95 / 159

96 / 159

97 / 159

98 / 159

99 / 159

100 / 159

101 / 159

102 / 159

103 / 159

104 / 159

105 / 159

106 / 159

107 / 159

108 / 159

109 / 159

110 / 159

111 / 159

112 / 159

113 / 159

114 / 159

115 / 159

116 / 159

117 / 159

118 / 159

119 / 159

120 / 159

121 / 159

122 / 159

123 / 159

124 / 159

125 / 159

126 / 159

127 / 159

128 / 159

129 / 159

130 / 159

131 / 159

132 / 159

133 / 159

134 / 159

135 / 159

136 / 159

137 / 159

138 / 159

139 / 159

140 / 159

141 / 159

142 / 159

143 / 159

144 / 159

145 / 159

146 / 159

147 / 159

148 / 159

149 / 159

150 / 159

151 / 159

152 / 159

153 / 159

154 / 159

155 / 159

156 / 159

157 / 159

158 / 159

159 / 159

Source: Gizmodo

Previous

Next