Throne of Eldraine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

ReleasedOctober 4, 2019
Size269 cards
Development codeArchery
Expansion codeELD
Throne of Eldraine
The set's expansion symbol depicts a crown, a sword and a knight's tabard.
ReleasedOctober 4, 2019
Size269 cards
Development codeArchery
Expansion codeELD
War of the Spark Theros Beyond Death

Throne of Eldraine is a standalone Magic: The Gathering expansion set that was released on October 4, 2019.[1] The set's expansion code is ELD and its development codename was "Archery".[2] MTG Arena officially launched with Throne of Eldraine.[3][4]

Fairy tales

Throne of Eldraine is inspired by fairy tales from King Arthur's Camelot and the European Grimms' Fairy Tales.[5][6] Previously Magic "had Faerie-focused sets [...] in the Lorwyn block, which saw various fairy tale-inspired tribes of creatures move to the fore while also introducing Planeswalkers as a concept for competitive play".[7]

On the design, Mark Rosewater said, "One of the cool things about fairy tales and Arthurian tales is that they have a lot of themes that run through multiple stories. [...] Fairy tales and Arthurian tales run the gamut of storytelling and easily provided material for all five colors".[8]

Planeswalkers

It is revealed in this storyline that the Planeswalker twins Rowan and Will Kenrith (introduced in the 2018 Battlebond set) are from the Eldraine plane.[9][10][11][12] The Planeswalker Garruk also returns in this storyline.[13][14] Jamie Lovett, for ComicBook.com, highlighted that Garruk was introduced in the Lorwyn block but "was notably absent from War of the Spark, a set that included more planeswalkers than any before. [...] In the [Throne of Eldraine] set, Garruk seems to take on the role of the huntsman from tales like Snow White and Red Riding Hood".[15]

This set also introduced a new Planeswalker, the Fey shapeshifter Oko.[16] Scott Gardner, for GameRant, wrote "in keeping with all the cautionary tales the Grimms were known for, Oko looks to fit into this world well with deceit, conceit, and an all-around sneaky personality. [...] Oko originated on a plane where the Fey were deemed as a menace to be suppressed. [...] Oko travels about playing cruel pranks on anyone and anything he feels is hypocritical, even other planeswalkers".[16] Oko's card was banned from the Standard and Brawl formats in November 2019.[17][18]

Mechanics

Reception

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI