Final Fantasy

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This article discusses story elements that are not considered canon.
External franchise
This article discusses story elements that are not considered canon. The story discussed here is based on Final Fantasy. It has no bearing on Magic continuity.
Final Fantasy
Set Information
Set symbol
Symbol description The FINAL FANTASY logo initials and a crystal
Vision Design Yoni Skolnik (lead), Zach Francks, Chelsea Santamaria, Melissa DeTora, Zakeel Gordon, Glenn Jones, Michael Hinderaker[1]
Set Design Gavin Verhey (lead), Yoni Skolnik, Cameron Williams, Michael Hinderaker, Melissa DeTora, Andrew Brown, Jadine Klomparens, Dillon Deveney.[2]
Art direction Stephanie Cheung
Release date June 13, 2025;
2 months ago
 (2025-06-13)
Themes and mechanics Adventures, Hero tokens, Equipment, Saga creatures
Keywords/​ability words Landfall, Tiered, Transform, Job select
Set size 309 + 276
Expansion code FIN[3]
Standard
Tarkir: Dragonstorm Final Fantasy Edge of Eternities
Universes Beyond
Assassin's Creed Final Fantasy Marvel's Spider-Man
Magic: The Gathering Chronology
Summer Superdrop 2025 Final Fantasy Through the Ages

Final Fantasy (stylized as Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY) is Magic: The Gathering's 105th expansion, and the first Standard-legal Universes Beyond product, based on the video game anthology of the same name. It was released on June 13, 2025.[4][5][6][7][8]

Similar to the previous large Universes Beyond set, The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth, Final Fantasy is designed to be drafted. The decision to release Final Fantasy into Standard was made during its development, but before play design, so the cards are appropriately tuned for the relatively low-power format.[9][10]

Product details

Expansion symbol featuring a crystal.

Final Fantasy features 309 regular cards (80 commons, 109 uncommons, 84 rares, 20 mythic rares, 16 basic lands), and includes randomly inserted traditional foil versions of all cards. It features artwork from Magic artists alongside classic artwork from Final Fantasy artists, as well as brand new artwork by FF artists specially made for this set. The set is available in Play Boosters, Collector Boosters, four Commander decks, the Final Fantasy Bundle, a Gift Bundle and a Starter Kit. Final Fantasy is also available on MTG Arena and Magic Online; on MTGO, however, the set is not redeemable.[11] There are no Special Guests in this set.

Each card in the set features a "game identifier" in the information below the text box, identifying the specific FF video game that its art and mechanics relate to.[12]

Booster Fun

The regular set includes 16 different basic lands, one for each mainline game in the series. These basic lands, consisting of three of each basic land type and one Wastes, include full-art "Landmark" basic lands. Alternate card frames have a different card number than the original version.[7][13] Borderless alternate art Adventure Lands are #310-314. Borderless Final Fantasy artist cards, with alternate art by original video game artists, are #315-355. Borderless Showcase "Woodblock" cards (#356-373) are inspired by the Japanese "Ukiyo-e" technique (this treatment was first used in Kamigawa: Neon Dynasty). Borderless "character" cards (#374-405) are illustrated by Japanese anime artists, and have a roman numeral in the background which correlates to each character's first game appearance. #406 is the default Traveling Chocobo. Alternate art Cids are #407-420. Extended art cards are #421-517. Surge foil character cards are numbered #519-550. The premium Chocobos are #551(a-f). Starter Kit cards are #552-563. #564-571 are unknown. Surge foil lands are 572-576. The remaining surge foils are #577-585.

Bonus sheet

Main article: Through the Ages

Through the Ages is a separate set of cards associated with Final Fantasy, with the set code FCA. In Through the Ages, Wizards of the Coast have reprinted 64 creatures on skinned cards with existing art from the Final Fantasy series, which highlights original Final Fantasy artists such as 天野喜孝 / YOSHITAKA AMANO[14] and 野村哲也 / TETSUYA NOMURA.[7] Play Boosters contain non-foil cards from Through the Ages and Collector Boosters both the non-foil and foil versions. These will only be legal in formats that they are already legal in and in Historic. They are not part of the Standard environment, but the cards may be used in Limited events.

Through the Ages cards do not have a dedicated slot in Final Fantasy Play Boosters, nor are they found in the wildcard or traditional foil slot.[13] Instead, players will find an uncommon (63.25%), rare (29.75%), or mythic rare (7%)Through the Ages card in one out of every three Play Boosters. When a Through the Ages card is in a Play Booster, it will replace one of the common cards. For Collector Boosters, there is a dedicated slot with the card being a traditional foil 50% of the time.[13]

Commander decks

Final Fantasy features four commander decks. While Commander precons are usually themed around certain characters, colors, or strategies, the twist with these is that each one is built around a single Final Fantasy game – specifically VI, VII, X, and XIV.[15] All four of these decks are available in both a regular version and a Collector’s Edition.

Theme
deck name
Color Identity Commander
White mana Blue mana Black mana Red mana Green mana
Revival Trance W B R Terra, Herald of Hope
Limit Break W R G Cloud, Ex-SOLDIER
Counter Blitz W U G Tidus, Yuna's Guardian
Scions & Spellcraft W U B Y'shtola, Night's Blessed

Starter Kit

The Starter Kit comes with two Standard-legal 60-card decks, designed to create an interactive learning experience for two. All cards in the Starter Kit are Standard legal.[16]

Starter kit
deck name
Colors Included Commander
White mana Blue mana Black mana Red mana Green mana
Cloud W R Cloud, Planet's Champion
Sephiroth U B Sephiroth, Planet's Heir

Chocobo chase cards

The headliner is Traveling Chocobo. A serialized gold foil textless version of the card depicts the elusive golden chocobo and is the rarest card from this set (#551f). This version can only be found in English-language Collector Boosters, with each copy being uniquely numbered from 1 to 77.[13]

You may also find four colorful neon ink foil Traveling Chocobo cards — pink, green, yellow, and blue — in all languages of Collector Boosters. These cards only appear in English (#551a-d).[13]

As a tribute to Final Fantasy Creative Director Tetsuya Nomura, the black Traveling Chocobo card, appearing in all languages of Collector Boosters, is only available in Japanese (#551).[13]

It is unclear why card #551e is missing.

Holiday Release

In addition to the June 13 release, this set features a holiday release on December 5, 2025. The release includes a Scene Box and a special Chocobo Bundle.[17]

Tokens and emblem

Final Fantasy has 23 tokens and one emblem with unique art.[12][18]

Themes and mechanics

A summon showing the modified frame used for Saga creatures.

Transforming double-faced cards return for this set.[19] By casting the front face of the card for its mana cost and fulfilling its required conditions, you can transform it to experience its alternate form. These cards range from the representations of favorite characters to minigames and story moments across the videogame series.

There are two new mechanics in the set.[7] One is job select.[20] (When this Equipment, enters create a colorless 1/1 Hero creature token and attach this to it.) This is similar to living weapon and For Mirrodin!, except with a colorless 1/1 Hero instead of a 0/0 black Phyrexian Germ or a red 2/2 Rebel.

The other new mechanic is tiered, which appears only on instants and sorceries and grants them scaling power throughout the game. Each card with tiered is a modal spell with three different modes. Each of the modes has an additional cost, similar to spree, but only one mode can be chosen when the spell is cast. No matter which mode you choose, the spell's mana value is the same.

Green/red has a landfall theme. Those colors also feature the new triple keyword action.

The set makes extensive use of flavor words, with each one representing an in-game ability or object associated with the character or their class.

Multiple cards have basic landcycling. Adventures can be found on five Towns. Cameos include devotion, hideaway, meld, and flipping a coin.

Card types

This set introduces the Moogle and Qu creature types.

Summons are one of the most iconic recurring aspects of the Final Fantasy franchise. To reflect this, the set introduces the first Saga Creatures to the game. These have a power and toughness as well as a text box that can fit abilities or flavor text, and the Saga reminder text is stretched across the top of the card to give it some vertical symmetry. Call the summons for aid in battle, and they enter with a single lore counter, granting you an immediate effect. After your draw step, you add a lore counter. The creature is sacrificed after the final chapter ability resolves. Thus, you have only a limited time to use the creature to attack.[7]

The set has legendary creatures appearing at uncommon.

Final Fantasy also introduces the Town land type.[20]

Counter types

Lore counters are used for the Saga Creatures, with the set having a minor theme of counter manipulation. Ultima, Origin of Oblivion is the second card to use blight counters after their debut in Bloomburrow.

Limited archetypes

The ten color-pair archetypes for Final Fantasy limited.
Limited archetypes for Final Fantasy.

Final Fantasy features the following limited archetypes:[21]

Source material

Final Fantasy is a Japanese science fantasy anthology media franchise created by Hironobu Sakaguchi and developed and owned by Square Enix. The franchise centers on a series of role-playing video games which variably combine elements of medieval fantasy, urban fantasy, and science fiction.[1][22] The first game in the series was released in 1987, with sixteen numbered main entries having been released to date, as well as numerous spinoff entries. Each main entry is not a direct sequel to the one before it but a new story in a different universe, although many of these universes share elements such as creatures (ex. chocobos, moogles, summoned monsters and battle enemy types), themes, and recurring names for characters and places. A handful of main entries have had direct sequels, such as Final Fantasy X-2 and Final Fantasy XIII-2.

The franchise has since branched into other video game genres, as well as other media, including CGI films, anime, manga, and novels.

The set references all mainline entries released so far, from Final Fantasy to Final Fantasy XVI, but not the supplemental entries, remakes, sequels, or spin-offs.[12]

Storyline

The central conflict in many Final Fantasy games focuses on a group of characters battling an evil, sometimes ancient, antagonist that dominates the game's world. Stories frequently involve a sovereign state in rebellion against a larger empire, with the protagonists participating in the rebellion. The heroes are often destined to defeat the evil as "Warriors of Light" and occasionally gather as a direct result of the antagonist's malicious actions. Another staple of the series is the existence of two villains; the main antagonist introduced at the beginning of the game is not always the final enemy, and the characters must continue their quest beyond what appears to be the final fight. The game's setting is usually not the planet Earth, though it may have similarities to it, but rather an expansively mapped science fantasy world that may or may not have a name of its own. Typically, magic and advanced technology both exist to varying degrees and blend. Crossovers such as Stranger of Paradise: Final Fantasy Origin and the fighting game sub-series Dissidia Final Fantasy have established that the various Final Fantasy dimensions share a multiverse.

Stories in the series frequently emphasize the internal struggles, passions, and tragedies of the characters, and the main plot often recedes into the background as the focus shifts to their personal lives. Magical orbs and crystals are recurring in-game items that are frequently connected to the themes of the games' plots. Other common plot and setting themes include the Gaia hypothesis, an apocalypse, the heroes' defiance against fate and the gods, and conflicts between advanced technology and nature.

Marketing

Key art featuring the mage Kefka Palazzo
“  Shape Your Magic Story  ”
Bundle

This set is considered a tentpole release, comparable with The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth.[9] In October 2024, it was announced that starting with the release of Final Fantasy, Universes Beyond tentpole sets would be made legal in all formats going forward. The goal was to make set legality simpler and easier to understand.[23][24]

The first cards were shown on February 17, and several additional character cards were spoiled after that, each on that character's birthday.[25]

Leaks

In early April 2025, A Brazilian distributor issued an urgent statement to retailers after identifying a distribution error involving Final Fantasy products sent erroneously by Wizards of the Coast. The company requested the immediate return of said products.[26][27] Two days later, Spanish-language cards from the Starter Kit were leaked—reportedly from Chile—two months before the release of the set.[28]

Secret Lairs

Alongside this set, Wizards of the Coast released three Secret Lair drops in June 2025.[7]

Events

Promos

  • Prerelease: a stamped card that can be any rare or mythic rare of Final Fantasy.[31]
    • The seasonal dark-frame promos are: N.A. (no dedicated promo pack for this set).
    • Prerelease players receive a collectible d10 spindown crystal counter for each event they attend (available while supplies last). A matching d20 spindown die version of the crystal counter can be found in 1-in-20 Prerelease Packs. Players who participate in multiple Prerelease events get a velvet pouch to store their crystal counters.[32]
  • Buy-a-Box: Herald's Horn (non-standard; features the FIC expansion code and a game identifier)

The following promos feature a PRM expansion code. These versions are therefore not part of the main set, as promos usually are. However, they do include FF game identifiers.

PRM code, but without the FF game identifier:

  • Metal tokens distributed through WPN stores in in Southeast Asia, North Asia, and China WPN stores. These special promo tokens feature new art versions of a Clue token and a Treasure token, while the emblem for Sephiroth, One-Winged Angel uses the art of the borderless version of Sephiroth by Tetsuya Nomura. The Clue and Treasure token illustrations were made by Toshiyuki Itahana.[35]

The following cards feature the SCH set code, but also the FF game identifier:

Cycles

Cycle name White mana Blue mana Black mana Red mana Green mana
Adventure Towns Ishgard, the Holy See Jidoor, Aristocratic Capital Midgar, City of Mako Lindblum, Industrial Regency Zanarkand, Ancient Metropolis
Five rare Town taplands, each with an Adventure sorcery. These are the only Adventures in the set.
Crystals The Wind Crystal The Water Crystal The Darkness Crystal The Fire Crystal The Earth Crystal
Five rare legendary artifacts for 2 generic manaMM, a cost reduction effect for spells of that color, another static ability, and a tap ability that costs 4 generic manaMM.
Sidequests Sidequest: Catch a Fish Sidequest: Card Collection Sidequest: Hunt the Mark Sidequest: Play Blitzball Sidequest: Raise a Chocobo
Five uncommon double-faced enchantments.
Uncommon Summons Summon: Primal Garuda Summon: Shiva Summon: Anima Summon: Esper Ramuh Summon: Fenrir
Five uncommon Saga creatures.
Landcyclers Cloudbound Moogle Ice Flan Malboro Hill Gigas Balamb T-Rexaur
Five common creatures with an enter ability and landcycling 2 generic mana of a specific basic land type.

Double cycles

Cycle name White manaBlue mana Blue manaBlack mana Black manaRed mana Red manaGreen mana Green manaWhite mana White manaBlack mana Blue manaRed mana Black manaGreen mana Red manaWhite mana Green manaBlue mana
Gold rare legendaries Hope Estheim Golbez, Crystal Collector Kuja, Genome Sorcerer Balthier and Fran Serah Farron Squall, SeeD Mercenary Tellah, Great Sage Jenova, Ancient Calamity Joshua, Phoenix's Dominant The Wandering Minstrel
Ten rare dual-colored legendary creatures.
Gold signpost legendaries Tidus, Blitzball Star Ultimecia, Time Sorceress Black Waltz No. 3 Gladiolus Amicitia Rinoa Heartilly Judge Magister Gabranth Shantotto, Tactician Magician Cloud of Darkness Giott, King of the Dwarves Omega, Heartless Evolution
Ten uncommon dual-colored legendary creatures, each being a signpost for a draft archetype.[21]
Gold non-signpost legendaries Cid, Timeless Artificer Locke Cole Garland, Knight of Cornelia Rydia, Summoner of Mist Garnet, Princess of Alexandria Rufus Shinra The Emperor of Palamecia Exdeath, Void Warlock Zidane, Tantalus Thief Ignis Scientia
Ten uncommon dual-colored legendary creatures that are strong limited cards but don't strictly adhere to the limited archetype.
Town taplands Sharlayan, Nation of Scholars Treno, Dark City Vector, Imperial Capital Gongaga, Reactor Town Windurst, Federation Center Insomnia, Crown City Baron, Airship Kingdom Gohn, Town of Ruin Rabanastre, Royal City Guadosalam, Farplane Gateway
Ten common dual taplands with the Town subtype.

Pairs

Final Fantasy has one mirrored pair and one meld pair:

Mirrored pair Description
Squall, SeeD Mercenary
(White manaBlack mana)
Seifer Almasy
(Red mana)
Two 3/4 legendary creatures with mana value 4 that have "Whenever a creature you control attacks alone, it gains double strike until end of turn." and can recur something with mana value 3 or less whenever they deal combat damage to a player.

Flavorfully, they represent the protagonist of Final Fantasy VIII and his rival. Both use the same weapon – a gunblade – and utilize a similar fighting style, but end up on opposing sides during the game.

Meld pairs Description
Fang, Fearless l'Cie
(Black mana)
Vanille, Cheerful l'Cie
(Green mana)
Two heroes that meld into a powerful AvatarRagnarok, Divine Deliverance

Reprinted cards

Reception

At the release of Hasbro's First Quarter 2025 Financial Report in April 2025, CEO Chris Cocks revealed that that even as a pre-order, Final Fantasy was already the best-selling set in Magic history.[36][37] This was confirmed after its release.[38]

Notable cards

Misprints

  • The borderless Jumbo Cactuar illustration was was incorrectly attributed to "夢子 / Yumeko", instead of 百瀬寿/HISASHI MOMOSE.[43]
  • The Japanese-language card name of Triple Triad was incorectly translated as "以下であり".[44] It should have been translated as "より小さく".
  • On the French-language version of Summon: Fat Chocobo, the III icon is used twice for its Kerplunk ability, accidentally replacing the IV icon.[45]

For each of the misprints, Wizards of the Coast corrected the digital versions on Magic Online and Magic: The Gathering Arena as well as updating their respective Gatherer entries.

  • The Japanese-language, non-foil borderless character version of Yuna, Hope of Spira was misprinted with the rare () expansion symbol and rarity indicator instead of the appropriate mythic rare () versions.[46] This misprint is purely cosmetic as the card is still found at the same rate as other mythic rare cards in boosters.[47] Wizards of the Coast have stated that future printings of the card will have the correct rarity.

Gallery

Arena avatars

Magic Online avatars

References

  1. a b Yoni Skolnik (June 5, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ Vision Design, Part 1". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  2. Gavin Verhey (June 5, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ Set Design: Melodies of Life". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  3. Information below the text box
  4. Matt Jarvis (October 4, 2022). "Magic: The Gathering is getting Final Fantasy and Assassin’s Creed cards". Dicebreaker.com.
  5. 30th Anniversary Panel at GenCon – A Recap of MTG's Past, Present & Future (Video). Magic: The Gathering. YouTube (August 5, 2023).
  6. Nick Miller (October 24, 2024). "Hasbro CEO Teases Third Universes Beyond Product Announcement In 2025 Following Final Fantasy And Marvel". StarCityGames.
  7. a b c d e f Zakeel Gordon & Jubilee Finnegan (February 18, 2025). "A First Look at Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  8. Eric Levine (May 30, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ Release Notes". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  9. a b Mark Rosewater (August 5, 2023). "The Final Fantasy set was described as a "tentpole booster release"; does that mean it will be draftable?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
  10. Mark Rosewater (February 19, 2025). "Was Final Fantasy ever considered for something other than standard?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
  11. Magic Online Team (June 10, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering®–FINAL FANTASY™ on MTGO". MTGO.com.
  12. a b c Blake Rasmussen, Gavin Verhey, Zakeel Gordon (February 18, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering – FINAL FANTASY First Look (Video)". Magic: The Gathering. YouTube.
  13. a b c d e f Zakeel Gordon & Jubilee Finnegan (May 10, 2025). "Collecting Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™: The Four Most Important Things to Know". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  14. Wizards of the Coast (February 17, 2025). "We couldn't do #MTGxFINALFANTASY without going back to the beginning and working with an artist who inspired generations of #FinalFantasy fans.". Twitter.
  15. Tom Marks (February 17, 2025). "Final Fantasy Commander Decks Revealed, Feature Cloud, Tidus, and More". IGN.com.
  16. Blake Rasmussen, Gavin Verhey, Zakeel Gordon (February 18, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering – FINAL FANTASY First Look (Video)". Magic: The Gathering. YouTube.
  17. Aggressive_Debate_80 (February 18, 2025). "Two other Final Fantasy Bundles planned for December?". Reddit.
  18. Jubilee Finnegan (May 30, 2025). "The Tokens of Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  19. Matt Tabak (May 10, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ Mechanics". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  20. a b [deleted] (April 4, 2025). "FF starterkit". Reddit.
  21. a b WeeklyMTG | Magic: The Gathering x Final Fantasy | Limited and Full Set Discussion (Video). Magic: The Gathering. YouTube (May 27, 2025).
  22. Yoni Skolnik (June 6, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ Vision Design, Part 2". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  23. Aaron Forsythe (October 25, 2024). "Aligning the Universes: Making All Our Sets Legal in All Our Formats". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  24. Magic: The Gathering (October 25, 2024). "We are making Universes Beyond tentpole sets legal in all formats going forward.". Twitter.
  25. Emma Partlow (Feb 21, 2025). "Everything We Know (So Far) About Magic: The Gathering—FINAL FANTASY". TCGPlayer.
  26. Romeu (April 4, 2025). "Wizards asks for return of Final Fantasy kits sent mistakenly to Brazil". Cardsrealm.com/.
  27. Josh Nelson (April 4, 2025). "Final Fantasy Prerelease Kits Recalled In Brazil After Error". Commandersherald.com.
  28. [deleted] (April 4, 2025). "FF starterkit". Reddit.
  29. Jubilee Finnegan (May 30, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ Prerelease Guide". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  30. WPN (February 18, 2025). "Magic Presents: Chocobo Racing Event Series". Wizards Play Network.
  31. Wizards of the Coast (May 14, 2025). "Where to Play Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  32. a b WPN (May 14, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering—FINAL FANTASY Promos and Usage". Wizards Play Network.
  33. Editorial Department: Chihiro (April 4, 2025). ""Magic: The Gathering -- FINAL FANTASY" will be holding a Japan-only campaign on June 6th where players can receive three types of promo cards". 4gamer.net.
  34. Wizards of the Coast (June 5, 2025). "Play Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ and Earn Special Team-Up Promos!". Magic.gg.
  35. Nick Miller (June 13, 2025). "Potential Metal MTG — FINAL FANTASY Tokens Coming To WPN Stores In Asia". Star City Games.
  36. Nick Miller (April 24, 2025). "MTG—FINAL FANTASY Already The Best-Selling Set Of All Time". Star City Games.
  37. Charlie Hall (April 24, 2025). "Final Fantasy Magic cards are helping protect Hasbro from Trump tariffs". Polygon.com.
  38. Rebekah Valentine (July 23, 2025). "Magic: The Gathering's Final Fantasy Expansion Made $200 Million in Just One Day". IGN.com.
  39. Seth Waterman (August 11, 2025). "We Might Have a Vivi Problem (Video)". MTGGoldfish. YouTube.
  40. Frank Karsten (August 15, 2025). "Metagame Mentor: Izzet Cauldron in Edge of Eternities Standard". Magic.gg.
  41. R3id (August 31, 2025). "Magic Spotlight - Planetary Rotation Top 8 (Hint, it's mostly Vivi Cauldron)". Reddit.
  42. Alex Atkin (August 18, 2025). "Wizards Confirms No Emergency Standard Ban Despite Identifying Problems". MTG Rocks.
  43. Wizards of the Coast (June 9, 2025). "Statement on Magic: The Gathering®—FINAL FANTASY™ Cards Promise of Loyalty and Jumbo Cactuar Artist Attribution". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  44. Wizards of the Coast (June 23, 2025). "Statement Regarding Japanese-Language Versions of Triple Triad". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  45. Wizards of the Coast (June 23, 2025). "Statement Regarding French-Language Versions of Summon: Fat Chocobo". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  46. u/Kupo43 (June 19, 2025). "Yuna - Hope of Spira Japanese Error, is it still legal?". Reddit.
  47. Wizards of the Coast (June 10, 2025). "Statement Regarding the Rarity of Yuna, Hope of Spira". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.

External links