Modern Horizons: Difference between revisions
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|symbol_description = ''[[Modern Masters]]'' symbol coming up from beyond the horizon | |symbol_description = ''[[Modern Masters]]'' symbol coming up from beyond the horizon | ||
|design = [[Ethan Fleischer]] (co-lead)<br>[[Mark Globus]] (co-lead)<br>[[Alli Medwin]]<br>[[Nat Moes]] (hackathon only)<br>[[Michael Majors|Mike Majors]]<br>[[Mark Rosewater]] | |design = [[Ethan Fleischer]] (co-lead)<br>[[Mark Globus]] (co-lead)<br>[[Alli Medwin]]<br>[[Nat Moes]] (hackathon only)<br>[[Michael Majors|Mike Majors]]<br>[[Mark Rosewater]] | ||
|development = [[Adam Prosak]] (co-lead)<br>Mark Globus (co-lead)<br>Mike Majors<br>[[Dan Musser]]<br>[[Tom Ross]]<br>[[Jules Robins]]<br>[[Mike Turian]]<br>[[Sam Stoddard]] | |development = [[Adam Prosak]] (co-lead)<br>Mark Globus (co-lead)<br>Mike Majors<br>[[Dan Musser]]<br>[[Tom Ross]]<br>[[Jules Robins]]<br>[[Mike Turian]]<br>[[Sam Stoddard]]<br>[[Gerry Thompson]]<ref>{{WebRef|url=https://www.hipstersofthecoast.com/2022/09/hipsters-of-the-coast-paid-me-1000-to-write-this-article-so-im-sharing-my-biggest-secret/|title=Hipsters Of The Coast Paid Me $1,000 To Write This Article, So I’m Sharing My Biggest Secret|author=[[Gerry Thompson]]|date=September 23, 2022|publisher=[[Hipsters of the Coast]]}}</ref>) | ||
|art = [[Cynthia Sheppard]] | |art = [[Cynthia Sheppard]] | ||
|release = June 14, 2019 | |release = June 14, 2019 | ||
|plane = | |plane = [[Multiverse|Multiversal]] | ||
|mechanics = [[Modern]] power level, [[hybrid mana]], [[pitch spell]]s, [[Sliver]]s, [[snow]], the [[Untap#Untap symbol|untap symbol]] | |mechanics = [[Modern]] power level, [[hybrid mana]], [[pitch spell]]s, [[Sliver]]s, [[snow]], the [[Untap#Untap symbol|untap symbol]] | ||
|keywords = [[ | |keywords = [[Changeling]] and [[#Themes and mechanics|multiple others]] | ||
|size = 254 cards<br/>+1 [[Buy-a-Box]] promo | |size = 254 cards<br/>+1 [[Buy-a-Box]] promo | ||
|code_expansion = MH1 | |code_expansion = MH1 | ||
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|code_development = Contemporary<ref>{{EzTumblr|https://markrosewater.tumblr.com/post/183380463538/can-you-tell-us-now-what-was-the-modern-horizons|title=Can you tell us now what was the Modern Horizons set codename?|March 11, 2019}}</ref> | |code_development = Contemporary<ref>{{EzTumblr|https://markrosewater.tumblr.com/post/183380463538/can-you-tell-us-now-what-was-the-modern-horizons|title=Can you tell us now what was the Modern Horizons set codename?|March 11, 2019}}</ref> | ||
|series = [[Modern#Modern Horizons|Straight-to-Modern sets]] | |series = [[Modern#Modern Horizons|Straight-to-Modern sets]] | ||
|first = | |first = | ||
|second = Modern Horizons | |second = Modern Horizons | ||
|third = | |third = Modern Horizons 2 | ||
|previous = War of the Spark | |previous = War of the Spark | ||
|next = Signature Spellbook: Gideon | |next = Signature Spellbook: Gideon | ||
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===Marketing=== | ===Marketing=== | ||
''Modern Horizons'' was sold in slightly larger-than-usual 17-card [[booster]]s (one card being a [[double- | ''Modern Horizons'' was sold in slightly larger-than-usual 17-card [[booster]]s (one card being a [[double-sided token]], and one being an [[art card]]<ref>{{EzTumblr|https://markrosewater.tumblr.com/post/188155573088/if-a-booster-pack-can-only-fit-sixteen-cards|title=what made the packaging for Modern Horizons special to allow the seventeenth card (the art card)?|October 05, 2019}}</ref>), and in a [[Draft Pack]]. The boosters feature horizontal artwork from <c>Ayula, Queen Among Bears</c>, <c>Serra the Benevolent</c> and <c>Urza, Lord High Artificer</c>.<ref name="Primer">{{DailyRef|feature/modern-horizons-prerelease-primer-2019-06-06|''Modern Horizons'' Prerelease Primer|[[Gavin Verhey]]|June 6, 2019}}</ref> The set was printed for as long as demand held.<ref>{{EzTumblr|https://markrosewater.tumblr.com/post/183130226138/will-modern-horizons-be-a-limited-print-run-or|title=Will Modern Horizons be a limited print run or printed for as long as demand holds?|February 28, 2019}}</ref> It was released on [[Magic Online]] on June 13, with a booster price of $6.99 (regular booster packs cost $3.99). It was not featured on [[MTG Arena]].<ref>{{EzTumblr|https://markrosewater.tumblr.com/post/184997055918/im-not-going-to-lie-from-what-i-understood-i|title=Glad to see you guys still supporting the older platform!|May 19, 2019}}</ref> | ||
====Prerelease==== | ====Prerelease==== | ||
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====Tokens / Emblem==== | ====Tokens / Emblem==== | ||
The sixteenth card in the boosters is a [[double- | The sixteenth card in the boosters is a [[double-sided token]] creature card or an [[emblem]]:<ref name="Twitch"/><ref name="Tokens">{{DailyRef|archive/card-preview/modern-horizons-tokens-and-art-series-2019-05-30|Modern Horizons Tokens and Art Series|[[Blake Rasmussen]]|May 30, 2019}}</ref> One out of every four tokens is [[foil]] (but not double-sided).<ref>{{TwitterRef|HipstersMTG|1134204001677971463|author=[[Hipsters of the Coast]]|title=One out of every four tokens in Modern Horizons will be foil|date=May 30, 2019}}</ref> | ||
# {{C}} 2/2 [[Shapeshifter]] creature with [[changeling]] for <c>Irregular Cohort</c> and <c>Birthing Boughs</c>. | # {{C}} 2/2 [[Shapeshifter]] creature with [[changeling]] for <c>Irregular Cohort</c> and <c>Birthing Boughs</c>. | ||
# {{W}} 4/4 [[Angel]] creature with [[flying]] and [[vigilance]] for <c>Serra the Benevolent</c>. | # {{W}} 4/4 [[Angel]] creature with [[flying]] and [[vigilance]] for <c>Serra the Benevolent</c>. | ||
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===Card types=== | ===Card types=== | ||
* ''Modern Horizons'' introduces the '''[[Serra]]''' and '''[[Wrenn]]''' [[planeswalker type]]s. | *''Modern Horizons'' introduces the '''[[Serra]]''' and '''[[Wrenn]]''' [[planeswalker type]]s. | ||
* [[Sliver]]s are a major tribe. They are depicted in their pre-[[M14]] form.<ref name="Modern Life">{{DailyRef|making-magic/modern-life-2019-05-27|''Modern'' Life|[[Mark Rosewater]]|May 27, 2019}}</ref><ref name="Modern Times"/><ref>{{DailyRef|sliver-direction-2019-05-22|A Sliver of Direction|[[Cynthia Sheppard]]|May 22, 2019}}</ref> | *[[Sliver]]s are a major tribe. They are depicted in their pre-[[M14]] form.<ref name="Modern Life">{{DailyRef|making-magic/modern-life-2019-05-27|''Modern'' Life|[[Mark Rosewater]]|May 27, 2019}}</ref><ref name="Modern Times"/><ref>{{DailyRef|sliver-direction-2019-05-22|A Sliver of Direction|[[Cynthia Sheppard]]|May 22, 2019}}</ref> | ||
* Rare types like [[Coward]], [[Goat]] and [[Trilobite]] get new support (<c>Pyrophobia</c>, <c>Goatnap</c>, <c>Scuttling Sliver</c>), reinforced by the [[changeling]] mechanic. [[Ninja]]s see a return as a draft archetype, as well as [[goblin]]s.<ref name="Modern Life"/> | *Rare types like [[Coward]], [[Goat]] and [[Trilobite]] get new support (<c>Pyrophobia</c>, <c>Goatnap</c>, <c>Scuttling Sliver</c>), reinforced by the [[changeling]] mechanic. [[Ninja]]s see a return as a draft archetype, as well as [[goblin]]s.<ref name="Modern Life"/> | ||
==Cycles== | ==Cycles== | ||
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*<c>Urza, Lord High Artificer</c> is an incredibly powerful artifact-based payoff card that spawned and revived several long-form artifact-based decks (unlike Affinity). It originally started with a variation on the <c>Thopter Foundry</c>-<c>Sword of the Meek</c> combo deck which began to put up large wins especially in a meta test with no Hogaak. Despite the <c>Mox Opal</c> ban the deck still could function perfectly well, given Urza's combo with <c>Whir of Invention</c> getting lock pieces. Urza still stands as one of the stronger foundations of Modern decks, and only with the bannings of <c>Uro, Titan of Nature's Wrath</c> and <c>Arcum's Astrolabe</c> has its share been lowered. | *<c>Urza, Lord High Artificer</c> is an incredibly powerful artifact-based payoff card that spawned and revived several long-form artifact-based decks (unlike Affinity). It originally started with a variation on the <c>Thopter Foundry</c>-<c>Sword of the Meek</c> combo deck which began to put up large wins especially in a meta test with no Hogaak. Despite the <c>Mox Opal</c> ban the deck still could function perfectly well, given Urza's combo with <c>Whir of Invention</c> getting lock pieces. Urza still stands as one of the stronger foundations of Modern decks, and only with the bannings of <c>Uro, Titan of Nature's Wrath</c> and <c>Arcum's Astrolabe</c> has its share been lowered. | ||
===Banned and | ===Banned and restricted cards=== | ||
*<c>Wrenn and Six</c> is the second, much more successful attempt to print a balanced two-mana planeswalker, limiting its abilities to rebuying lands and pinging. While successful in Modern, as it revived Midrange Jund as a deck while not being overwhelming, access to repeatable <c>Wasteland</c> was enough to warrant its ban in Legacy by November 2019. | *<c>Wrenn and Six</c> is the second, much more successful attempt to print a balanced two-mana planeswalker, limiting its abilities to rebuying lands and pinging. While successful in Modern, as it revived Midrange Jund as a deck while not being overwhelming, access to repeatable <c>Wasteland</c> was enough to warrant its ban in Legacy by November 2019. | ||
*<c>Hogaak, Arisen Necropolis</c> is a unique creature that can only be cast via the usage of the [[delve]] and [[convoke]] mechanics and may also be cast from the graveyard. As it turned out, two creatures and five cards in the graveyard was so trivial in Modern that a second-turn Hogaak was a little over a third to occur per game. This resulted in the event know as Hogaak Summer around the time of [[Mythic Championship IV]] whereby the Hogaak Bridgevine decks (using <c>Vengevine</c>, <c>Bloodghast</c>, and <c>Bridge from Below</c>) completely dominated the modern meta. Banning <c>Bridge from Below</c> simply forced superior tuning of the deck, and while it was underrepresented in the Top 8 it was known to be a victim of its own success. It ultimately also took a ban shortly after, in August 2019. | *<c>Hogaak, Arisen Necropolis</c> is a unique creature that can only be cast via the usage of the [[delve]] and [[convoke]] mechanics and may also be cast from the graveyard. As it turned out, two creatures and five cards in the graveyard was so trivial in Modern that a second-turn Hogaak was a little over a third to occur per game. This resulted in the event know as Hogaak Summer around the time of [[Mythic Championship IV]] whereby the Hogaak Bridgevine decks (using <c>Vengevine</c>, <c>Bloodghast</c>, and <c>Bridge from Below</c>) completely dominated the modern meta. Banning <c>Bridge from Below</c> simply forced superior tuning of the deck, and while it was underrepresented in the Top 8 it was known to be a victim of its own success. It ultimately also took a ban shortly after, in August 2019. | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|<c>Cabal Therapist</c> | |<c>Cabal Therapist</c> | ||
|{{Card|Cabal Therapy|3=JUD}} | |{{Card|Cabal Therapy|3=JUD}} | ||
|Both cards cost {{B}}. Cabal Therapist enables one to repeatedly "cast" Cabal Therapy for its flashback cost through its pre-combat main phase ability. The titular Cabal Therapist is the same figure as seen in Cabal Therapy's ''Judgment'' artwork. | |Both cards cost {{B}}. Cabal Therapist enables one to repeatedly "cast" Cabal Therapy for its flashback cost through its pre-combat main phase ability. The titular Cabal Therapist is the same figure as seen in Cabal Therapy's ''Judgment'' artwork. | ||
|- | |- | ||
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|- | |- | ||
|{{Card|Face of Divinity}} | |{{Card|Face of Divinity}} | ||
|{{Card|Daybreak Coronet|3=FUT}} | |{{Card|Daybreak Coronet|3=FUT}} | ||
|Auras that promotes enchanting a single creature with more auras. Both card arts feature halos glowing around the heads. | |Auras that promotes enchanting a single creature with more auras. Both card arts feature halos glowing around the heads. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|<c>First-Sphere Gargantua</c> | |<c>First-Sphere Gargantua</c> | ||
|<c>Phyrexian Rager</c> and <c>Phyrexian Gargantua</c> | |<c>Phyrexian Rager</c> and <c>Phyrexian Gargantua</c> | ||
|References the [[Phyrexia#First Sphere|First Sphere of the original Phyrexia]]. First-Sphere Gargantua has the same mana cost as Phyrexian Gargantua and its unearth cost is the same as Phyrexian Rager. When cast | |References the [[Phyrexia#First Sphere|First Sphere of the original Phyrexia]]. First-Sphere Gargantua has the same mana cost as Phyrexian Gargantua and its unearth cost is the same as Phyrexian Rager. When cast and then paying its unearth cost after it gets put into the graveyard, First-Sphere Gargantua imitates Phyrexian Gargantua's enter-the-battlefield ability. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|<c>Fists of Flame</c> | |<c>Fists of Flame</c> | ||
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|<c>Rotwidow Pack</c> | |<c>Rotwidow Pack</c> | ||
|<c>Spider Spawning</c> and <c>Ishkanah, Grafwidow</c> | |<c>Spider Spawning</c> and <c>Ishkanah, Grafwidow</c> | ||
|Rotwidow Pack's ability is a singular version of Spider Spawning, then activates Ishkanah's ability. | |Rotwidow Pack's second ability is a singular version of Spider Spawning, then activates Ishkanah's ability. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|<c>Savage Swipe</c> | |<c>Savage Swipe</c> | ||
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|<c>Thundering Djinn</c> | |<c>Thundering Djinn</c> | ||
| | | | ||
|References <c>Brainstorm</c> and <c>Lightning Bolt</c> in the [[flavor text]]. | |References <c>Brainstorm</c> and <c>Lightning Bolt</c> in the [[flavor text]], hinting at what cards to use to achieve its effect that mimics another card to its fullest potential. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|<c>Thornado</c> | |<c>Thornado</c> |
Latest revision as of 16:28, 17 June 2024
Modern Horizons | |||||
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[[File:{{#setmainimage:Modern Horizons logo.png}}|250px]] | |||||
Set Information | |||||
Set symbol | |||||
Symbol description | Modern Masters symbol coming up from beyond the horizon | ||||
Design |
Ethan Fleischer (co-lead) Mark Globus (co-lead) Alli Medwin Nat Moes (hackathon only) Mike Majors Mark Rosewater | ||||
Development |
Adam Prosak (co-lead) Mark Globus (co-lead) Mike Majors Dan Musser Tom Ross Jules Robins Mike Turian Sam Stoddard Gerry Thompson[1]) | ||||
Art direction | Cynthia Sheppard | ||||
Release date | June 14, 2019 | ||||
Plane | Multiversal | ||||
Themes and mechanics | Modern power level, hybrid mana, pitch spells, Slivers, snow, the untap symbol | ||||
Keywords/ability words | Changeling and multiple others | ||||
Set size |
254 cards +1 Buy-a-Box promo | ||||
Expansion code | MH1[2] | ||||
Development codename | Contemporary[3] | ||||
Straight-to-Modern sets | |||||
| |||||
Magic: The Gathering Chronology | |||||
|
Modern Horizons is a Magic booster set which was released on June 14, 2019.[4] Modern Horizons was the Innovation Product for 2019, and was designed to be drafted.[5][6]
Set details
Modern Horizons contains 254 cards (5 snow-covered basic lands, 101 commons, 80 uncommons, 53 rares, 15 mythic rares[7]), and includes randomly inserted premium versions of all these cards. In addition, there is a Buy-a-Box card numbered #255/254. This set introduced new cards into Modern without them ever being legal in Standard. It contains 209 new cards and (excepting the snow basics[8]) only reprints which previously weren't legal in Modern.[9] For this, it was rigorously playtested by Play Design.[10] The Buy-a-Box card is also a new-to-Modern reprint. The powerful new card options, some with old mechanics, are mixed with flavorful updates for favorite characters.[11] The snow-covered basic lands appear in the land slot of Modern Horizons boosters.
Modern Horizons was originally dubbed as "Timespiral / Planar Chaos 2" in concept due to set complexity.[12] Mark Rosewater has called it a "love letter" to the Time Spiral block.[12] It isn't an entry level set because of its many returning mechanics. There was no story support for the set.[13]
Marketing
Modern Horizons was sold in slightly larger-than-usual 17-card boosters (one card being a double-sided token, and one being an art card[14]), and in a Draft Pack. The boosters feature horizontal artwork from Ayula, Queen Among Bears, Serra the Benevolent and Urza, Lord High Artificer.[15] The set was printed for as long as demand held.[16] It was released on Magic Online on June 13, with a booster price of $6.99 (regular booster packs cost $3.99). It was not featured on MTG Arena.[17]
Prerelease
Prerelease events took place on June 8–9, 2019.[15]
Promotional cards
- Buy-a-Box: Flusterstorm (non-foil, because it was expected to see tournament play and most tournament players prefer non-foil cards.[18])
- Preview (prerelease participation promo card): Astral Drift
Tokens / Emblem
The sixteenth card in the boosters is a double-sided token creature card or an emblem:[19][20] One out of every four tokens is foil (but not double-sided).[21]
- 2/2 Shapeshifter creature with changeling for Irregular Cohort and Birthing Boughs.
- 4/4 Angel creature with flying and vigilance for Serra the Benevolent.
- 1/1 Bird creature with flying for Battle Screech.
- 1/1 Soldier creature for Recruit the Worthy.
- 1/1 Illusion creature with flying for Moonblade Shinobi.
- 20/20 legendary Avatar creature with flying and indestructible named Marit Lage for Marit Lage's Slumber.
- 2/2 Zombie creature for Rank Officer.
- 1/1 Elemental creature for Seasoned Pyromancer.
- 3/1 Elemental creature with trample and haste for Force of Rage.
- 1/1 Goblin creature for Goblin War Party, Pashalik Mons, and Sling-Gang Lieutenant.
- 2/2 Bear creature for Ayula's Influence and Mother Bear.
- 3/3 Elephant creature for Generous Gift and Trumpeting Herd.
- 4/4 Rhino creature with trample for Crashing Footfalls.
- 1/2 Spider creature with reach for Rotwidow Pack and Twin-Silk Spider.
- 1/1 Squirrel creature for Deep Forest Hermit and Squirrel Nest.
- 1/1 Spirit creature with flying for Kaya's Guile.
- 0/0 Construct artifact creature with "This creature gets +1/+1 for each artifact you control" for Urza, Lord High Artificer.
- 3/3 Golem artifact creature for Splicer's Skill.
- 1/1 Myr artifact creature for Mirrodin Besieged.
- Emblem for Serra the Benevolent.
- Emblem for Wrenn and Six.
Modern Horizons Art Series
The seventeenth card in the boosters is an art card with horizontal full art from one of the regular cards in the set.[19] The card back is mostly blank, with some collector's info. There are 54 different art cards.[20]
Themes and mechanics
There are no new mechanics in Modern Horizons.[22] Instead, the set features more than forty non-evergreen returning mechanics.[23] R&D decided that the set could use any mechanic already in Modern up to Dragons of Tarkir.[24]
A major mechanic is changeling, used to make a cohesive set (like it was used in Lorwyn previously).[5][25] Snow is also a major mechanic.[25]
With Splicer's Skill and Everdream, the set introduces a long-awaited variant from "splice onto Arcane" with "splice onto instant or sorcery" (As you cast an instant or sorcery spell, you may reveal this card from your hand and pay its splice cost. If you do, add this card’s effects to that spell.).
Other returning mechanics are:[26] anchor words, battle cry, buyback, cascade, convoke, cycling, dash, delve, devour, dredge, echo, entwine, evoke, evolve, exalted, exploit, fateful hour, flashback, hellbent, hideaway, hybrid mana, kicker, level up, manifest, modular, monstrosity, morbid, ninjutsu, outlast, overload, persist, pitch spells, proliferate, protection, rebound, replicate, retrace, shroud, storm, suspend, threshold, totem armor, undying, unearth, the untap symbol, and vanishing.
Like in Future Sight before, the set features some "mix-and-match" cards, combining two different non-evergreen keywords on the same card: Feaster of Fools, Hogaak, Arisen Necropolis and Throes of Chaos.[27]
Modern Horizons features the following limited archetypes:[19]
- : Blink (Soulherder)
- : Ninjas (Ingenious Infiltrator)
- : Goblins (Munitions Expert)
- : "Lands in graveyard" matters (Ruination Rioter)[25]
- : "Creaturefall" (Good-Fortune Unicorn)
- : Changelings (Etchings of the Chosen)
- : "Drawing two cards" matters (Thundering Djinn)
- : Graveyard (Rotwidow Pack)
- : Slivers (Lavabelly Sliver)
- : Snow (Abominable Treefolk)
Card types
- Modern Horizons introduces the Serra and Wrenn planeswalker types.
- Slivers are a major tribe. They are depicted in their pre-M14 form.[25][27][28]
- Rare types like Coward, Goat and Trilobite get new support (Pyrophobia, Goatnap, Scuttling Sliver), reinforced by the changeling mechanic. Ninjas see a return as a draft archetype, as well as goblins.[25]
Cycles
Modern Horizons has nine cycles, two of which are double cycles.
Single cycles
Cycle name | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Forces | Force of Virtue | Force of Negation | Force of Despair | Force of Rage | Force of Vigor |
Each of these rare spells (four instants and an enchantment with flash) has an alternate casting cost that includes exiling a card of its color if it is not the player's turn. | |||||
Slivers | First Sliver's Chosen | Scuttling Sliver | Dregscape Sliver | Hollowhead Sliver | Tempered Sliver |
One monocolored uncommon Sliver of each color. | |||||
Legendary creatures | Sisay, Weatherlight Captain | Urza, Lord High Artificer | Yawgmoth, Thran Physician | Pashalik Mons | Ayula, Queen Among Bears |
Each of these monocolored legendary creatures represents a character in Magic lore.[29] | |||||
Cycling lands | Secluded Steppe | Lonely Sandbar | Barren Moor | Forgotten Cave | Tranquil Thicket |
Each of these uncommon cycling lands enters the battlefield tapped, taps for one mana of a color, and has cycling for one mana of that color. They were reprinted from Onslaught.[30] | |||||
Snow-covered lands | Snow-Covered Plains | Snow-Covered Island | Snow-Covered Swamp | Snow-Covered Mountain | Snow-Covered Forest |
Each of these basic lands has the snow supertype. They were reprinted from Ice Age and Coldsnap. | |||||
Cycle name | |||||
Horizon lands | Silent Clearing | Fiery Islet | Nurturing Peatland | Sunbaked Canyon | Waterlogged Grove |
Each of these rare pain lands can be sacrificed to draw a card by paying . They form an enemy colored cycle mirroring Horizon Canopy from Future Sight.[31][32] | |||||
Talismans | Talisman of Hierarchy | Talisman of Creativity | Talisman of Resilience | Talisman of Conviction | Talisman of Curiosity |
Each of these uncommon artifacts costs to cast and feature a quote from a planeswalker of the appropriate color pair. They form an enemy cycle mirroring the talismans from Mirrodin. |
Double cycles
Cycle name | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Uncommon signposts | Soulherder | Ingenious Infiltrator | Munitions Expert | Ruination Rioter | Good-Fortune Unicorn | Etchings of the Chosen | Thundering Djinn | Rotwidow Pack | Lavabelly Sliver | Abominable Treefolk |
Ten uncommon spells, each one a signpost for its respective draft archetype. | ||||||||||
Rare spells | Unsettled Mariner | Fallen Shinobi | Lightning Skelemental | Reap the Past | Eladamri's Call | Kaya's Guile | Collected Conjuring | Hogaak, Arisen Necropolis | Cloudshredder Sliver | Ice-Fang Coatl |
Ten rare spells, one for each color pair. |
Pairs
Modern Horizons has one mirrored pair.
Mirrored Pairs | Description | |
---|---|---|
Ranger-Captain of Eos () | Seasoned Pyromancer () | Two mythic rare creatures with the cost of 1MM and have self-removal abilities that grant benefits. Both cards are future versions of already-printed creatures, Ranger of Eos and Young Pyromancer, respectively. |
Mega-mega cycles
The Mirran swords mega-mega cycle gets its first allied colored additions. Though, the cycle is not complete with Modern Horizons.[27][33]
The Morphlings mega-mega cycle was completed.[27]
Reprints
About 15% of the cards in the set (45 total + 1 Buy-a-Box) are reprints.[34] Except for the 5 basic snow lands these cards are Modern legal for the first time.[8]
Functional reprints
- Phantom Ninja is a functional reprint of Phantom Warrior, save for creature types.
Notable cards
Modern Horizons completely shifted the meta of Modern and the eternal formats. It caused the banning of both older and newer cards, which led to the collapse of several older decks that were part of the main Modern meta.
- Morophon, the Boundless has a five-color color identity, and can be used as a commander for various tribal Commander decks.[5]
- Ayula, Queen Among Bears is a bear lord that is a prototype bear.[27]
- King of the Pride is a cat lord.
- Throes of Chaos is a sorcery with no spell ability.
- Force of Negation is a powerful three-mana blue spell that was an attempt to port the popular Force of Will from Legacy into Modern. Initially, it was little used (mostly in Azorius control decks and Infect decks) and through most of 2020 actually saw more play in Commander than modern. However, the card is still a powerful sideboard card in both Modern and Legacy, acting as an extra Force copy in unfair matches and a serviceable Negate variant in fair ones.
- Urza, Lord High Artificer is an incredibly powerful artifact-based payoff card that spawned and revived several long-form artifact-based decks (unlike Affinity). It originally started with a variation on the Thopter Foundry-Sword of the Meek combo deck which began to put up large wins especially in a meta test with no Hogaak. Despite the Mox Opal ban the deck still could function perfectly well, given Urza's combo with Whir of Invention getting lock pieces. Urza still stands as one of the stronger foundations of Modern decks, and only with the bannings of Uro, Titan of Nature's Wrath and Arcum's Astrolabe has its share been lowered.
Banned and restricted cards
- Wrenn and Six is the second, much more successful attempt to print a balanced two-mana planeswalker, limiting its abilities to rebuying lands and pinging. While successful in Modern, as it revived Midrange Jund as a deck while not being overwhelming, access to repeatable Wasteland was enough to warrant its ban in Legacy by November 2019.
- Hogaak, Arisen Necropolis is a unique creature that can only be cast via the usage of the delve and convoke mechanics and may also be cast from the graveyard. As it turned out, two creatures and five cards in the graveyard was so trivial in Modern that a second-turn Hogaak was a little over a third to occur per game. This resulted in the event know as Hogaak Summer around the time of Mythic Championship IV whereby the Hogaak Bridgevine decks (using Vengevine, Bloodghast, and Bridge from Below) completely dominated the modern meta. Banning Bridge from Below simply forced superior tuning of the deck, and while it was underrepresented in the Top 8 it was known to be a victim of its own success. It ultimately also took a ban shortly after, in August 2019.
- Arcum's Astrolabe is one of the only Snow-casting spells in Magic, designed to support Snow decks in draft formats by filtering off-color Snow land mana into any color. Ported to Constructed, however, it let four-color mana-bases run Blood Moon without any hesitation, turning formats into "four-color soup" decks, and its Artifact typing enabled various ways to abuse it in any format. It was hence banned in Pauper (October 2019), Modern (July 2020), and Legacy (February 2021).
Callbacks
Card | Inspired by | Notes |
---|---|---|
Answered Prayers | Angel's Tomb | Both cards are 3-mana permanents that can transform into a 3/3 Angel creature with flying whenever a creature enters the battlefield under their controller's control. |
Archmage's Charm | Cryptic Command | The art also resembles Cancel (Amonkhet). Archmage's Charm is one mana and one ability less than Cryptic Command, can also counter target spell or draw cards, and shares its iconic cost. |
Aria of Flame | Torch Song | And other growing enchantments using verse counters from Urza's Saga. Aria of Flame has the same cost as Torch Song. |
Astral Drift | Astral Slide | Astral Drift serves as a self-functioning version of Astral Slide that can cycle itself to gain its effect. |
Ayula's Influence | Seismic Assault | Colorshifted from red to green. Both cards are enchantments that cost three of the same colored mana and have the ability to discard a land to produce an effect with the number 2 on it. |
Bazaar Trademage | Bazaar of Baghdad, Serendib Efreet | Its flavor text references Squandered Resources and the story of Aladdin, with Aladdin's Ring, Aladdin's Lamp, and Flying Carpet. Being a 3/4 Flying for references Serendib Efreet, a stand-in for the Genie. Bazaar Trademage's enter-the-battlefield ability is one activation of Bazaar of Baghdad's ability. |
Bogardan Dragonheart | Volcanic Dragon | By sacrificing a creature, Bogardan Dragonheart becomes Volcanic Dragon. |
Cabal Therapist | Cabal Therapy (Judgment) | Both cards cost . Cabal Therapist enables one to repeatedly "cast" Cabal Therapy for its flashback cost through its pre-combat main phase ability. The titular Cabal Therapist is the same figure as seen in Cabal Therapy's Judgment artwork. |
Changeling Outcast | Tormented Soul | Changeling Outcast is a changeling Tormented Soul with similar art. |
Chillerpillar | Giant Caterpillar | Both creatures are 3/3 insects that cost 3M. Both also have the ability to grant themselves flying. |
Cloudshredder Sliver | Skyknight Legionnaire | Cloudshredder Sliver's artwork is similar to Skynight Legionnaire's first artwork. Both creatures have flying and haste. |
Collected Conjuring | Collected Company | Both cards cost 4 mana. Collected Conjuring is Collected Company except as a sorcery, is multicolored, and does the same free casting effect for sorceries instead. |
Collector Ouphe | Brown Ouphe and Null Rod | Collector Ouphe is Brown Ouphe with Null Rod. In other words, a 2/2 Brown Ouphe with the mana value and ability of Null Rod. |
Cordial Vampire | Indulgent Aristocrat | Both 1/1 Vampire creatures add a +1/+1 counter to the controller's Vampires whenever a creature dies - one as a trigger, the other as an activated ability |
Crashing Footfalls | Hypergenesis, etc., Horncaller's Chant | As Hypergenesis is the only "costless suspend" card of the cycle banned, Crashing Footfalls re-completes the cycle. Crashing Footfalls' effect is similar to Horncaller's Chant, which also can (potentially) create two 4/4 green Rhino creature tokens with trample. |
Deep Forest Hermit | Deranged Hermit | Both creatures are 1/1 elves with the same costs. Their enters-the-battlefield abilities create four 1/1 green Squirrel creature tokens and grant Squirrel creatures +1/+1. Both also have an ability that makes their stay on the battlefield temporary. |
Defile | Mutilate[36] | Defile is a -cost Mutilate that only targets a single creature. |
Dregscape Sliver | Dregscape Zombie | A Sliver living on Grixis that grants Unearth, but with the cost made colorless. |
Echo of Eons | Time Spiral and Timetwister | Echo of Eons has the same ability as both Time Spiral and Timetwister. Echo of Eons also has a mana cost the same as Time Spiral and a flashback cost the same as Timetwister. The flashback ability also imitates Time Spiral's self-exiling ability. |
Endling | Morphling | Last card of the Morphling mega-mega cycle.[27][35] |
Ephemerate | Flicker | Cheap exile-and-return spells. Ephemerate is cheaper, creature-focused, and can be cast at instant speed as well as be cast twice. |
Everdream | Evermind,[36] Think Twice | Everdream has a mana cost the same as Evermind's splice cost and its splice cost is the same as Think Twice's flashback cost. The three cards have the same ability to draw a card. Everdream's artwork is also similar to Evermind. |
Excavating Anurid | Anurid Barkripper | References the Anurids of Otaria, and references Turg. Frogs that become more powerful upon Threshold. |
Face of Divinity | Daybreak Coronet (Future Sight) | Auras that promotes enchanting a single creature with more auras. Both card arts feature halos glowing around the heads. |
First-Sphere Gargantua | Phyrexian Rager and Phyrexian Gargantua | References the First Sphere of the original Phyrexia. First-Sphere Gargantua has the same mana cost as Phyrexian Gargantua and its unearth cost is the same as Phyrexian Rager. When cast and then paying its unearth cost after it gets put into the graveyard, First-Sphere Gargantua imitates Phyrexian Gargantua's enter-the-battlefield ability. |
Fists of Flame | First ever mentioning of Jared Carthalion (the Shadow Mage) in the flavor text.[37] | |
Force of Despair | Force of Will and Cradle to Grave | Force of Despair is Cradle to Grave with Force of Will's similar alternate casting cost and naming scheme. |
Force of Negation | Force of Will and Negate | Force of Negation is an exiling Negate with Force of Will's similar alternate casting cost and naming scheme. |
Force of Rage | Force of Will and Spark Elemental | Force of Rage is two Spark Elementals with Force of Will's similar alternate casting cost and naming scheme. |
Force of Vigor | Force of Will and Naturalize | Force of Vigor is a doubled Naturalize with Force of Will's similar alternate casting cost and naming scheme. |
Force of Virtue | Force of Will and Glorious Anthem | Force of Virtue is a Glorious Anthem with flash and Force of Will's similar alternate casting cost and naming scheme. |
Frostwalla | Rootwalla[36] | Frostwalla is a snow Rootwalla that has an activated ability costing one snow mana instead. |
Generous Gift | Beast Within | Colorshifted green to white except for creature types.[27][32][35] |
Geomancer's Gambit | Ghost Quarter | Geomancer's Gambit's first ability is the same as Ghost Quarter's second activated ability. |
Giver of Runes | Mother of Runes | Both are creatures with the ability to to give protection from a chosen color. The Giver loses the ability to protect itself in exchange for increased toughness and having colorless as a listed option. |
Glacial Revelation | Kruphix's Insight | Both are sorceries that look at the top six cards of one's library and selects for a certain type and puts the rest into the graveyard. Kruphix's Insight only picks three, while Glacial Revelation can be any number. |
Gluttonous Slug | Morkrut Necropod | Both are Slug Horror creatures with Menace and flavor text referencing improbable amounts of salt. |
Goatnap | Goatnapper | Goatnapper's top-down ability was intended only for Changelings in Lorwyn, now reimagined to work on any creature but has an added bonus if it used on Changelings (and actual Goats). |
Goblin Engineer | Goblin Welder | Both are Goblin Artificers that can swap out artifacts from the graveyard and battlefield, but the Engineer has a new templating. |
Goblin Oriflamme | Orcish Oriflamme (Alpha#Misprints) [27] | Also has a quote from the Sarpadian Empires in its flavor text. Orcish Oriflamme famously had a misprint at , which is what Goblin Oriflamme is. |
Good Fortune Unicorn | Juniper Order Ranger | Both are creatures that give a +1/+1 counter to your later-entering creatures. |
Graveshifter | Gravedigger | Graveshifter is a Changeling Gravedigger with similar art to the latter's Tempest art. |
Hall of Heliod's Generosity | Academy Ruins and Volrath's Stronghold | Third in a cycle of legendary lands that for 1M can put a target card of a particular card type from your graveyard on top of your library. |
Headless Specter | Hypnotic Specter | References Hymn to Tourach in the flavor text. Headless Specter needs Hellbent to be exactly like Hypnotic Specter. |
Hexdrinker | Progenitus | First reuse of protection from everything. |
Iceberg Cancrix | Hedron Crab | Crabs that mill with entry triggers. |
Ice-Fang Coatl | Baleful Strix and Winged Coatl | 1/1 Flying Blue creatures that draw a card upon entry. Both Coatls have deathtouch, but Ice-Fang Coatl needs three snow permanents to gain it. |
Impostor of the Sixth Pride | Blade of the Sixth Pride | A Blade of the Sixth Pride with Changeling |
King of the Pride | Savannah Lions | References the The Love Song of Night and Day in the flavor text. King of the Pride is a 2/1 cat lord that doubles the stats of Savannah Lions. |
Knight of Old Benalia | Knight of New Benalia | Human Knights from different ages of Benalia. Use of suspend suggests that the Old Knight came from the past long after the New Knight as printed. |
Lancer Sliver | Talon Sliver | White Slivers granting First Strike. The flavor text of Lancer Sliver suggests that Gerrard's order of polearms in the Talon Sliver flavor text was futile. |
Lesser Masticore | Masticore | A Masticore where effectively everything is halved; cost, power, toughness, ability efficiency, survivability, but also the discard cost. |
Lightning Skelemental | Ball Lightning and Blightning | A Ball Lightning that causes discard upon hitting the player. Plays on the homophonic names - could also be known as "Ball Blightning". |
Llanowar Tribe | Llanowar Elves | Three Llanowar Elves stuck together, with all that entails. |
Marit Lage's Slumber | Dark Depths | Another way to create a Marit Lage token, but noticeably less easy to cheat out. Both cards' methods of creating a Marit Lage token involve the number ten on it. |
Martyr's Soul | Nantuko Shaman | Colorshifted green to white. Both 3/2 creatures cost 2M (where M is the colored mana) with abilities that activate if they enter the battlefield without any tapped lands. Both also have keyworded abilities that would guarantee that criteria. |
Mind Rake | Mind Rot | Mind Rake is a Mind Rot with overload that costs cheaper than its mana cost. |
Mirrodin Besieged | Monastery Siege, etc. | Call back to the Mirrodin Besieged set where Mirrans and Phyrexians fought over the dominance of Mirrodin. One of the few cards to share its name with a set.[27] The artwork depicts Jin-Gitaxias, the Phyrexian praetor who is the same color as the card. Mirrodin Besieged has the same cost as Monastery Siege as well as similar titles. |
Mist-Syndicate Naga | Spawnwrithe | Creatures that copy themselves upon dealing damage to a player. Both have abilities that guarantee that criteria. |
Mother Bear | Grizzly Fate | Mother Bear's graveyard ability and its cost are similar to Grizzly Fate's mana cost and flashback ability. |
Mox Tantalite | Lotus Bloom and Mox Opal | And other Moxen. Mox Tantalite has the exact same Suspend cost and placed time counters as Lotus Bloom. |
Munitions Expert | Volley Veteran | Goblins that deal damage equal to the number of controlled Goblins to creatures. Both flavor texts and arts suggest the throwing of anything and everything available. |
Murasa Behemoth | References Murasa and how cards like Greenwarden of Murasa focus on cards in the graveyard. | |
Nature's Chant | Naturalize and Disenchant | Colorshifted from green and white to hybridcolored. The name is a portmanteau of both previous cards. |
On Thin Ice | Chained to the Rocks | Land Auras that imprison opposing creatures into one's land. |
Pashalik Mons | Mons's Goblin Raiders | A vanity card.[27] Depicts the leader of the titular goblin raiders. |
Phantasmal Form | Phantom Monster | Turns two creatures into Phantom Monsters. Similar artworks. |
Phantom Ninja | Phantom Warrior | A Ninja reprint of the classic unblockable Warrior. |
Plague Engineer | Engineered Plague, Carrier creatures | An Engineered Plague on a 2/2 Deathtouch Carrier, a mechanical type based around giving creatures -X/-X. The flavor text is quoted from Phyrexian progress notes on their biological weapon. |
Planebound Accomplice | Sneak Attack | A Sneak Attack for Planeswalkers. |
Pondering Mage | Ponder | A 3/4 creature that casts Ponder upon entry. |
Pyrophobia | Refers to famed "coward" Norin the Wary in quote, and Boldwyr Intimidator. | |
Prismatic Vista | Terramorphic Expanse and the Onslaught Fetch land cycle | A fetch land that merges the two designs - only gets basics, but gets them untapped by paying 1 life. |
Ranger-Captain of Eos | Ranger of Eos | A Bant Soldier that searches for 1-drop creatures. Ranger-Captain of Eos shows the promotion of Ranger of Eos. |
Ransack the Lab | Strategic Planning | Colorshifted blue to black. |
Ravenous Giant | Juzám Djinn | Colorshifted black to red. |
Recruit the Worthy | Sprout Swarm | Instants that create 1/1 creature tokens. Recruit the Worthy removes the Convoke ability in exchange for having a 1-mana cost. |
Return from Extinction | References the continuation of the events seen in Riptide Replicator where the Slivers have fully returned from extinction. | |
Rotwidow Pack | Spider Spawning and Ishkanah, Grafwidow | Rotwidow Pack's second ability is a singular version of Spider Spawning, then activates Ishkanah's ability. |
Savage Swipe | Savage Punch | A Fight spell that can grant +2/+2 depending on power. Savage Punch famously depicts a bear being hit, while the reverse happens for Savage Swipe. |
Scale Up | Craw Wurm | Turns target creature into a Craw Wurm in stats and creature type. Can turn all creatures into Craw Wurms for the cost of a Craw Wurm |
Scour All Possibilities | Preordain | A Preordain with Flashback. |
Scuttling Sliver | Horseshoe Crab | Scuttling Sliver grants an untapping activated ability at the cost of 2 generic mana instead of 1 colored mana. The Trilobite subtype is a nod to the scientific inaccuracy of labelling a Horseshoe Crab a crab, though labelling it a trilobite is not any more accurate. Nevertheless, horseshoe crabs are also described as living fossils. |
Seasoned Pyromancer | Young Pyromancer | Red Human Shamans that create 1/1 Elemental tokens - the art suggests a Young Pyromancer grown up and experienced. |
Segovian Angel | Segovian Leviathan | References Segovia, and Worzel and Thomil in the flavor text. The art and abilities also resembles Serra Angel (Ninth Edition) and has The Hippodrome in the background. The plane of Gargantikar was created exclusively to set up a joke for this card.[27][38] |
Serra the Benevolent | Serra Aviary, Serra Angel, and Worship[32] | Serra's first, second, and third abilities refer to the three Serra-related cards respectively. |
Settle Beyond Reality | Journey to Nowhere | Similar artworks. Spells that exile creatures and returns them (potentially in Settle Beyond Reality's case). |
Shenanigans | Art resembles the destruction of a Chromatic Lantern. | |
Sisay, Weatherlight Captain | Captain Sisay [27] | Two incarnations of Sisay that both tutor for Legendary permanents. |
Sling-Gang Lieutenant | Siege-Gang Commander | A Goblin leader that sacrifices its fellow tokens to cause damage. |
Smiting Helix | Lightning Helix[36], Essence Drain | Refers to how Essence Drain is on-color in . Thus, Smiting Helix is a cheaper Essence Drain with a flashback cost equal to Lightning Helix's mana cost. |
Soul-Strike Technique | Soul Summons | cards that Manifest. |
Spell Snuff | Cancel | Spell Snuff is Cancel with a fateful hour ability that draws a card. |
Spiteful Sliver | Spitemare | "Spiting" Red cards that hurt others the same scale it was hurt. |
Splicer's Skill | Sensor Splicer, Splice cards | Plays off the homonymic Splice mechanic with the New Phyrexia Splicer creatures, with art specifically referencing Sensor Splicer and Phyrexian Splicer |
Springbloom Druid | Harrow | A 1/1 creature that casts Harrow upon entry. |
Stream of Thought | Stream of Consciousness, Dampen Thought, and Train of Thought | A reference to the Champions of Kamigawa Arcane Mill draft strategy, using Replicate in lieu of Splice. |
String of Disappearances | Chain Lightning | Colorshifted red to blue.[27] Both cost M mana and cost the target's controller MM to copy. |
Sword of Sinew and Steel and Sword of Truth and Justice | Sword of Light and Shadow and Sword of Fire and Ice | Pairs of Mirran swords that, if wielded together respectively, grant protection from the same four colors. |
Tempered Sliver | Slith Predator | A metalized Sliver living on New Phyrexia. The Sliver's flavor text refers to the Predator's ability to adapt as well as granting other Slivers' the Predator's ability. |
Thundering Djinn | References Brainstorm and Lightning Bolt in the flavor text, hinting at what cards to use to achieve its effect that mimics another card to its fullest potential. | |
Thornado | Tornado | Similar names. |
Tribute Mage | Trinket Mage, Treasure Mage, and Trophy Mage [27] | Depicts the Sword of the Meek and is the fourth in the line of mana value artifact tutors. |
Treefolk Umbra | Doran, the Siege Tower | Turns enchanted creature into Doran in how it assigns its combat damage. |
Trumpeting Herd | Call of the Herd | Sorceries that create a 3/3 green Elephant creature token as well as an ability to repeat that ability again. |
Twisted Reflection | Twisted Image | Power/toughness switchers, both with the same Drake over a watery reflection in the artwork. A reference to the oft-cited combination of how power reduction and P/T switching, both mono-blue abilities, can combine to a kill spell. |
Umezawa's Charm | Umezawa's Jitte[32] | A Charm that mimics a single activation of the Jitte. |
Unbound Flourishing | Doubling Season | Similar namesakes. Enchantments that double certain effects. |
Undead Augur | Corpse Augur | Zombie Wizards that draws cards upon death. |
Urza, Lord High Artificer | Temporal Aperture and Tolarian Academy | Karn, Scion of Urza (Urza's creation) produces the same artifact tokens.[27] Urza's third ability is the same as activating the Aperture, and tapping one's artifacts for is similar to tapping to generate a for each artifact. |
Vengeful Devil | Scalding Devil | Devils with activated abilities that deal direct damage. |
Venomous Changeling | Giant Scorpion | A Giant Scorpion with Changeling. |
Vesperlark | Reveillark | A smaller White flier with Evoke that can reanimate small creatures - the evening counterpart (Vespers) to the morning (Reveille). |
Viashino Sandsprinter | Viashino Sandstalker | Hasty Viashino Warriors for that return themselves to their owner's hands. |
Wall of One Thousand Cuts | Wall of Swords | A 3/5 Flying Wall that can now attack. |
Watcher for Tomorrow | The hideaway lands from Lorwyn.[36] | A new use of Hideaway, which brings with it the oddity that the creature also must enter tapped, a consequence of Hideaway needing too much space to fit its rules text. |
Weather the Storm | Grapeshot and Tendrils of Agony | A specifically anti-storm card that allows one to survive the first round of Tendrils of Agony. |
Webweaver Changeling | Mammoth Spider | A 3/5 Reach creature shaped like a Spider. Webweaver Changeling also has an extra ability at the cost of having a slightly more complex mana cost. |
Winding Way | Mulch | A Mulch that now can choose creatures. |
Winds of Abandon | Path to Exile and Cyclonic Rift | A Path to Exile with Overload - the name keeps the weather motif. |
Zhalfirin Decoy | Master Decoy | Features a quote by Sidar Jabari, and is riding a Zebra Unicorn. Human Warriors that tap creatures. |
References
- ↑ Gerry Thompson (September 23, 2022). "Hipsters Of The Coast Paid Me $1,000 To Write This Article, So I’m Sharing My Biggest Secret". Hipsters of the Coast.
- ↑ Information below the text box
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (March 11, 2019). "Can you tell us now what was the Modern Horizons set codename?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Blake Rasmussen (February 28, 2019). "Announcing Modern Horizons". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b c Mark Rosewater (May 20, 2019). "Modern Sensibilities". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ What's the Story of Modern Horizons? (Video). Good Morning Magic. YouTube (May 21, 2021).
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (May 31, 2019). "Modern Horizons Release Notes". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b Mark Rosewater (May 19, 2019). "IIRC It was mention that only five cards in Horizons were already in Modern.". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (March 09, 2019). "Modern Horizons has the restriction of "All re-prints have to be non-modern-legal cards."". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (February 28, 2019). "Is modern horizons something you can do now because of play design?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (February 28, 2019). "Can you explain to someone who doesn't play modern what's so innovative and exciting about modern horizons?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ a b Emma Partlow (April 28, 2019). "Interesting thoughts from Maro's Q&A at MtGLondon.". Twitter.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (May 29, 2019). "Do you know if we'll be getting any lore for Hogaak?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (October 05, 2019). "what made the packaging for Modern Horizons special to allow the seventeenth card (the art card)?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ a b Gavin Verhey (June 6, 2019). "Modern Horizons Prerelease Primer". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (February 28, 2019). "Will Modern Horizons be a limited print run or printed for as long as demand holds?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (May 19, 2019). "Glad to see you guys still supporting the older platform!". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Modern Horizons' Unprecedented Buy-a-Box Promo (And 2 More Things You Should Know). Wizards Play Network (May 20, 2019).
- ↑ a b c Weekly MTG: Modern Horizons on Twitch
- ↑ a b Blake Rasmussen (May 30, 2019). "Modern Horizons Tokens and Art Series". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Hipsters of the Coast (May 30, 2019). "One out of every four tokens in Modern Horizons will be foil". Twitter.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (May 18, 2019). "Will Modern Horizons have any new Keywords?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater. Twitter (May 19, 2019).
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (May 19, 2019). "Can you tell us the year the newest mechanic in Modern Horizons is?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ a b c d e Mark Rosewater (May 27, 2019). "Modern Life". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Matt Tabak (May 31, 2019). "Modern Horizons Mechanics". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mark Rosewater (June 10, 2019). "Modern Times". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Cynthia Sheppard (May 22, 2019). "A Sliver of Direction". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (May 28, 2019). "Can you confirm or deny the last mythic of Modern Horizons is a land?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Brian Braun-Duin (May 29, 2019). "Hitting for the Cycle". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (May 21, 2019). "Land on the Horizon". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b c d Ethan Fleischer (May 23, 2019). "A Magic Set About Magic: The Gathering". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater. "Can we expect the full allied sword of and...". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (May 19, 2019). "Can you give us an idea of how many new cards vs. reprint-to-Modern cards are in Modern Horizons?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ a b c Gavin Verhey (May 28, 2019). "Magic's Past, Present, and Future". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ a b c d e Adam Prosak (May 30, 2019). "What's in a Name?". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Ethan Fleischer (May 23, 2019). "We wanted to sprinkle in some obscure Easter eggs for the truly obsessed, longtime storyline goobs.". Twitter.
- ↑ Ethan Fleischer. Twitter.