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Are Magic The Gathering Players Tired Of Universes Beyond? Mark Rosewater And The Spider-Man Design Team Weigh In
Game Updates

Are Magic The Gathering Players Tired Of Universes Beyond? Mark Rosewater And The Spider-Man Design Team Weigh In

by admin September 29, 2025



As I entered Wizards of the Coast’s Seattle headquarters, I was greeted not only by the Wizards’ team, but by an astoundingly large statue of a magnificent copper dragon. The statue, of course, was none other than the beloved beast Mitzy, one of Magic: The Gathering’s iconic mascots. After spending a sufficiently long amount of time gazing at both Mitzy and a wall covered in unopened booster packs, a surreal catalog of Magic’s three decades of history, I was led to the studio’s dining hall. Yet to call that room a dining hall feels almost inaccurate, as the majority of what graced those tabletops was–you guessed it–Magic cards.

Throughout the day, I watched as folks rummaged through their bags for cards, or sauntered over to dig through the studio’s boxes of bulk, then holed up at a table for a game or three. And while most of the folks I saw playing were, like me, giddy members of the press, it was plain to see that this level of excitement–this enthusiasm for play–was not an incidental or momentary thing, but rather a part of the studio’s culture.

It’s invigorating, finding yourself around people who make something you care deeply about and discovering their love for that creation is as genuine as you’d hoped it was–that there is a palpable reverence for it. And yet, something bit at me as we delved into conversations about the main reason I had come to the studio: Magic: The Gathering’s Spider-Man collaboration.

Here I was, among the minds who helped build my favorite planes and stories–among images and statues of Liliana Vess, Chandra Nalaar, and Shivan dragons–and yet, discussions were largely about Spider-Man. And I get it. It makes perfect sense to want to discuss your show-stopping collaboration with Marvel that is, as of today, officially released. At the same time, what about, well, Magic?

Spider-Man swings through the air in an illustration by artist Javier Charro

I’ll admit that some of my feeling this way comes from my own growing hesitations toward Universes Beyond–the side of Magic: The Gathering in which various properties (like Final Fantasy, Fallout, Assassin’s Creed, Doctor Who, and Spider-Man, to name a few) are turned into Magic cards. In 2025, three of the seven sets scheduled for release are Universes Beyond sets. And while there’s nothing inherently wrong with that, their presence has certainly led to some tension in the community, with some levying complaints about being priced out of the hobby by collectors and others expressing frustration over the way that some original sets–like Tarkir: Dragonstorm and Edge of Eternities–have been overshadowed.

Magic: The Gathering head designer Mark Rosewater, lead designer Cory Bowen, and senior art director Sarah Wassell were all receptive when it came to answering questions regarding these issues. But beyond that, they also reassured me that Universes Beyond–the upcoming Spider-Man set included–are labors of love, and serve as a way for them to express their deep appreciation for fandoms outside of Magic: The Gathering, while also trying to grow and appease their own widespread community. Though it remains to be seen how Magic: The Gathering will change in the coming years, the following conversation reaffirmed that passion for the game and flexibility are leading the charge.

While Universes Beyond sets seem to be doing well commercially, it feels safe to say that there has been some criticism leveled against how often these sets are appearing. Does the team find this to be a legitimate issue? Are there plans to address this going forward?

Rosewater: Essentially, the way we function in Magic–and this has been true since Magic’s beginning–is we try something new to see what the players like. If the players like something, we make more of it. If they don’t like it, we make less of it. That’s the nature of how we make Magic since Magic began.

Universes Beyond was the same thing. When we tried originally, we did a little bit of it to see what people liked. They liked it, so we did a little bit more. The reason there’s so much Universes Beyond is because the players are overwhelmingly excited by it. Final Fantasy, which came out earlier in the year, is the best-selling set of all time. It defeated the previous best-selling set of all time, which was the Lord of the Rings.

We provide what the player base wants. The fact that the Universes Beyond sets are doing well says there’s an audience–that people are excited by this. We’re just meeting the needs of the players. If the players weren’t excited, if they weren’t happy, if they weren’t buying lots of it, we wouldn’t make lots of it. But that’s not what’s happening, so that is why we’re doing more.

Wassell: Another thing, too, is that Magic is a physical thing. This is an analog process. The cards are made by big, loud, noisy machines and it’s a little bit hard to pivot really quickly on things when something’s already at a certain point in production.

Cory Bowen: But we’re always using feedback. We’re always going to keep doing what people want. Right now, people want Universes Beyond, people want magical worlds, and we’re going to keep doing that as long as they want them. And we’re going to react as quickly as our printing process allows.

I would guess too, with utilizing intellectual properties, that creating Universes Beyond sets is an extremely lengthy process. I remember talking to folks about the Final Fantasy set and hearing it took over five years to realize. Once that’s started, you are on that course. Does this incentivize you to lean more into Secret Lair or other avenues rather than keeping Universes Beyond at the current size?

Rosewater: When we look at properties, Magic has a lot of different options. There’s a large set, there’s Secret Lair, and then there’s things in between. We’ve done Commander Decks. We try to establish what size the property is, then what’s the best way to make Magic with that.

Some things make perfect sense as a small number of cards in a Secret Lair. Some are an entire set. And for some, like Marvel, one set is not enough. They have so much material that it’s multiple sets. We are very flexible to try to meet the demands of the property. But as you can see, we’ve been interacting with lots and lots of properties.

Do you find it at all limiting to work within the confines of an IP or the real world?

Bowen: There’s a lot of fun with it. There’s freedom in making stuff up, but there’s real fun in taking stuff that people know and trying to express it through Magic. I love City Pigeon. I think City Pigeon is emblematic of the most fun I’ve had making this set.

Rosewater: In general, I like doing things that I don’t always do just because it changes things up. It was fun to have a set where there’s a real world to compare it to. I like bouncing back and forth. I wouldn’t always want to do that, but it was very refreshing when that’s not what we normally do.

When I think of artists who’ve helped shape pop culture, I think of Kirby, McFarlane, Romita Sr., and other iconic comic book illustrators. What was it like getting to use the moments they created and their illustrations?

Wassell: It was mind-blowing. Getting to have their names on a Magic card, getting to look at their work up close and trying to figure out how to honor it and yet adapt it for a new use … I think it really gave us all a feeling of responsibility. With great art comes great responsibility. We were so excited to use it and to work with it, but we also really wanted to make sure that we were honoring it.

Rosewater: One of the neat things about Universes Beyond is that, eventually, we get to what I call your passion property; that property that means something to you. It affected you as you grew up, and it’s something that defines who you are as a person. I grew up reading comics. I mean, I wear superhero shirts constantly. It’s a big part of my identity. So the chance to finally get to make these cards, and to make them for people who like me? It’s just been lots and lots of fun–endlessly fun. I could go through Spider-Man and make notes on it to the end of time just because it’s so much fun to ask ourselves, “Can we capture those little tiny moments?”

I remember I was doing flavor text and one of the cards talked about how Spider-Man’s web dissolves in 30 minutes. And I’m like, “No, no. Actually … ” And we changed it. It maps in the comics how long it takes Spider-Man’s spider webs to dissolve. I care and I know the people that will care. So we want to put that time and energy into making sure that we’re making the best possible Magic set, but also the best possible Spider-Man set for all the Spider-Man fans.

The cards Savage Beating, Peter Parker, and Ponder, all which feature artwork from iconic comic artists.

How was it melding together the artists that you commissioned for original pieces for the set, and these pre-established works? Was there an effort to keep things in line with the tone of these previous artists or were you more adventurous with it?

Wassell: One of the things we were excited to do–and how we approached this from the beginning from a visual perspective–was with respect to comic books’ very distinct visual eras. We went into the project with that in mind. We were very deliberate about, “Okay, now we’re going really into the Golden Era,” “Oh, now we’re going to go into the Dark Ages,” or “Now we’re going to work with someone who’s making really exciting Marvel art now–how does that look different from the way it used to look?” We were pretty deliberate about where we deployed those visual styles.

While Spider-Man does have more fantastical elements, and other sets, like Doctor Who, have had some more grounded elements–funny as it is to call Doctor Who “grounded”–I feel like this is the first one that is very realistic. It largely has a New York setting, for example. What were the challenges in making cards that are set inside what is essentially a different version of our universe, and making them feel at home among these other planes?

Bowen: Design-wise, it’s challenging. There’s a few things that were easier. It’s easy to make a bird in Magic, so the pigeon was easy. We have food tokens, so it was easy to make food stuff that happens to resonate. But Taxi Driver being a creature … it’s a little bit of an odd concept.

It seems challenging, but doing vehicles, food, locations with lands, and certain creatures … it sounds difficult but the more you do, the more that Magic actually has the language to express those things. I think it was almost easier to express [all of that] design-wise than it was to do Spider-Man stuff. Spider-Man punching or doing his flips or whatever, those were harder to express with language. But with the environment stuff, Magic just actually has a bunch of tools to express the world because its best quality is world-building.

Rosewater: Magic is 32 years old this year, and because we’ve been making the game for 32 years, we have a lot of tools. Really it’s just a matter of adapting the tools for whatever world we’re doing. We’re constantly making new worlds. This was a little different, you’re right. This was more “Our World” than most Magic sets tend to be, but we do have the tools to capture it. It just feels a little bit different because Magic tends to be more fantastical. A hot dog card is a little less fantastical than the average thing we do.

Wassell: There were moments that were a little bit easier in that way, though. I’ve been to New York City. I know things about it. So when we’re doing a card that has a bodega on it, or there’s a scene with the back of a rental truck in it, those are those moments where, when we get the sketch in from the artist and the rental truck is all clean on the back, I can be like, “There’s no way that truck would be untapped in New York, driving on those city streets.” Those moments are, to me, the most fun–when we get into the world building of the in-world experience of these objects, vehicles, animals … stuff like that.

Bowen: Those details help a lot to immerse you in this world. This world is New York, and there’s a lot to love about New York. We’re immersing you in it in a similar way that we immerse you into a new plane we’ve created.

Rosewater: The big difference is, let’s say we make a brand-new plane, we can do whatever we want. I mean, we’re making the world, so we can make choices that we think makes the world make sense. No one’s going to say, “Oh no, that’s not how that looks in that world.” Because nobody knows that. But in New York, you have the sense that you know what it should look like. That’s probably the trickier thing, we’re used to making our own worlds so no one can question, “Hey, that’s not how it looked.” We don’t get to make up New York. New York is New York.

The Soul Stone, Spectacular Spider-Man variants, and the set’s comic book cover-inspired full-art cards are among the most sought after.

How was it designing mechanics that are based on superheroes? These are inherently overpowered characters, and I’m sure you want these figures to be extremely powerful. At the same time, I’m sure you don’t want them to be game-breaking and overly powerful. How do you tread that?

Bowen: Magic gives a lot of room for both really abstract expression and really specific expression. Yes, these characters are larger-than-life, but we do need them to play well. Gameplay ultimately is the king here, and not every Spidey character is going to be a 10/10 or an 8/8, if that’s the proportional strength of a Spider. They all need to play well in the environments.

Things like rarity are a really good way to express that these are the Spider-characters we think are really cool. Like, Cosmic Spider-Man’s got to be a mythic–he just feels like he has a step above. And there’s a relative expression among the spider-characters.

Is it a little weird that a taxi driver and Spider-Man can take each other out in combat? It’s a little weird, but again, Magic is an abstract game. Fifteen squirrels can kill an Elder God. There’s a little bit of suspension of disbelief, which helps out a lot.

Rosewater: When you’re making Magic cards, mostly what you want to do is make exciting things that do something. Marvel is about superheroes and supervillains with magical powers, and costumes that are designed to look really cool when you see them. Marvel has actually been perfect for making just really awesome Magic cards. They do fantastical things, and fantastical things make fun cards.

Last year, Wizards of the Coast announced the return of MSRP, and I know people were super excited about it. But obviously that is a suggested price, not an enforced price. Since then, however, prices have never been as high as they are now, which seems a result of the increase of Universes Beyond production. Do you have any plans on addressing these issues, or is that something that’s more out of your hands?

Rosewater: As you said, we have no control. That’s how capitalism works. People can charge whatever they want, so it’s a tricky question. It’s just outside of our control.

Bowen: People in this room are not in the conversations of pricing, I’ll say that.

This interview has been lightly edited for brevity, clarity, and readability.



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September 29, 2025 0 comments
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Dwight from The Office appears on official Magic: The Gathering cards
Product Reviews

Magic: The Gathering cards featuring Dwight from The Office are a step too far for some, though others think they’re ‘so bad its circling back to being funny’

by admin September 28, 2025



“I’m rarely at a loss for words,” says Saffron Olive on the hive of scum and villainy formerly known as Twitter, “but I honestly have no idea what to say about the Dwight from the Office Secret Lair drop.”

Others have eagerly stepped in to fill the gap. Over on the MagicTCG subreddit, HiroProtagonest says, “I don’t wanna associate with someone who’d buy merch for The Office”, though in another thread Raevelry says, “This is so bad its circling back to being funny Like, this is a HIGH QUALITY shitpost cringe, its almost impressive, all of these fit his ‘lore’, they’re well drawn, amazing lore text”.

Secret lairs are mini-sets containing a handful of cards a regular Magic expansion wouldn’t have room for. A lot of them present alternate art, with guests like Junji Ito invited to present their own take on iconic cards, though since the best-selling Walking Dead secret lair back in 2020 they’ve often been crossovers. While more thematically matching crossovers like Final Fantasy tend to get full-size sets, secret lair crossovers provide a space for something smaller and often a bit more light-hearted, like Hatsune Miku or Monty Python.


Related articles

And this is how now Dwight from The Office arrives in Magic. As announced in a roundup of October’s secret lairs, he’ll be getting his own six-card “drop” alongside fantasy artist Kieran Yanner, Iron Maiden, Jaws, and Furby. You might expect the Furby cards to attract the most controversy, but apparently it’s Rainn Wilson as a muscular farmer holding a giant turnip on a reskin of the Swords to Plowshares card that crosses the line.

Admittedly I’ve never seen the American version of The Office, but I’m struggling to have an opinion about this. Magic did a Fortnite-themed secret lair in 2021, so complaints about “Fortnite-ification” are a bit late to the party, and as someone who has read a bunch of Magic comic books and short stories I don’t think the sanctity of the game’s official setting is really worth preserving. I’m just going to shrug and move on with my day if that’s OK with you.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.



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September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Kirk looks at MTG Secret Lair drops in shock.
Game Reviews

The Gathering Set And Secret Lair Drop Revealed For 2026

by admin September 27, 2025


MagicCon Atlanta just kicked off and with it, the roadmap for Magic: The Gathering in 2026. It includes seven sets and more branded crossovers than you can shake a Black Lotus at. If you thought this year was overstuffed, just wait. From Lorwyn and Star Trek to The Last of Us and Dwight from The Office, Wizards of the Coast is ready to take everything in your wallet, and your sanity, too.

Lorwyn Eclipsed – January 23, 2026

Wizards of the Coast

It’s been 18 years since players visited Lorwyn, the idyllic land of whimsical creatures like elves and merfolk. Lorwyn Eclipsed is one of the most-anticipated authentic MTG sets in years, with old mechanics returning to the spotlight and players getting to go back to where Planeswalkers were first introduced. I can’t believe it’s been that long. I still remember drafting my first Jace Beleren in college.

Mystery Universes Beyond set – 2026

Wizards of the Coast

Wizards of the Coast teased a mystery set it’s not ready to fully reveal yet. More details are coming during New York Comicon in October where, as others have noted, there’s a Magic and Nickelodeon panel planned. Are we getting Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles? Rugrats? Hey Arnold? All of the above?!

Secrets of Strixhaven – April 2026

Wizards of the Coast

School is back in session. Secrets of Strixhaven will take players back to the plane of Arcavios where colleges of sorcerers-in-training compete for bragging rights in the Mage Tower. It’s Wizards’ knock-off of Harry Potter and we’ll find more about what its next set has in store in early 2026.

Marvel Super Heroes – June 2026

Wizards of the Coast

If any of the sets can rival the dominance Final Fantasy had this past summer, it’s this one. It’ll draw from characters across the Marvel universe, meaning Avengers, Fantastic Four, X-Men, and more. There will also be all the villains to account for. I’d have preferred just an X-Men set, personally. There’s way too much material to speed through in one set. But here we are.

The Hobbit – August 2026

Wizards of the Coast

A return to Tolkien’s world of hobbits, wizards, and dragons is on the way. The Lord of the Rings set was the first MTG Universes Beyond release to make a big splash. This set will be heading back to the prequel book and pulling from an earlier part of the Third Age. Will there be another One Ring card to rule them all this time around?

Reality Fracture – October 2026

Wizards of the Coast

Wizards has been setting up Reality Fracture as a big comic-book-style event that will reverberate across its multiverse. We have no idea what to expect really, but the company is teasing “a villain you’ll have to see to believe.” Is it the friends we made along the way?

Star Trek – November 2026

Wizards of the Coast

First Lego, now MTG. I’m embarrassed about how much money I’m about to drop chasing a surge foil full alt art Jean-Luc Picard commander card. The set will feature characters and ships from across the entire franchise. I can’t wait to make a Borg deck.

Secret Lair x PlayStation Superdrop

Wizards of the Coast

Secret Lair drops are always a mess and I’m guessing this one won’t be any different. Who’s ready to spend 45 minutes in an online queue only for Wizards to sell out and refuse to let you give it $100 at the end? The Kratos art looks incredible though.

Secret Lair x Jaws: Terror of Amity Island

Wizards of the Coast

Here’s the rest of the Secret Lair drop announcements, and somehow Jaws isn’t the weirdest one. 

Secret Lair x The Office: Dwight’s Destiny

Wizards of the Coast

The Office was a funny show and the world is never gonna let us forget it.

Secret Lair x Iron Maiden: Album Art

Wizards of the Coast

I defer to the Iron Maiden x MTG fans on this.

Secret Lair x Iron Maiden: Eddie Unchained

Wizards of the Coast

See above.

Secret Lair x Furby: Doo-ay Noo-lah

Wizards of the Coast

Wut?

Secret Lair x Furby: The Gathering

Wizards of the Coast

???

Secret Lair x Furby: The OddBodies

Wizards of the Coast

Absolutely not.



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September 27, 2025 0 comments
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PlayStation Magic Cards
Game Updates

The Gathering Is Making PlayStation Cards, And They Look Great

by admin September 26, 2025


 

Magic: The Gathering has become the Fortnite of trading card games, and as annoying as I find the practice of constantly dumping different IPs together, even God’s strongest soldiers are not immune to propaganda. At MagicCon Atlanta, Wizards of the Coast and Sony announced that PlayStation series are getting seven different Secret Lair drops for various games, and folks, I want those Last of Us cards.

On October 27, Wizards of the Coast will be selling seven PlayStation sets, with most of them covering different franchises in the console maker’s catalog. However, both The Last of Us and God of War are getting two sets. The former will have a pair of cards for both the first game and its sequel, while the latter will cover both the original Greek storyline and the reboot’s Norse one. With the exception of the Last of Us and God of War sets, most of these drops just seem to feature one card with their respective games’ protagonists. The set will drop at 9 a.m. Pacific Time that Monday.

The full line-up includes:

  • The Last of Us Part I
  • The Last of Us Part II
  • Uncharted
  • God of War: Greek
  • God of War: Norse
  • Horizon Forbidden West
  • Ghost of Tsushima

Though it’s not surprising that Sony would want to spotlight its current stable of prestige action games, I’m bummed there’s not more classic PlayStation representation here. Give me Parappa the Rapper, you cowards. But that’s pretty par for the course these days with Sony. Even its upcoming concert series is leaning heavily into its new stuff. 

I don’t play Magic, but I did buy the Sonic cards they put out earlier this year just to get the Shadow the Hedgehog one. He’s sitting pretty on my shelf, so I guess I’ll also buy the Last of Us ones next month, to keep him company. You know, as long as they don’t sell out before it’s my turn in the queue.



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September 26, 2025 0 comments
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A witch from Magic: The Gathering casts a spell.
Game Reviews

The Gathering Lead Apologizes For Infamous Card From 27 Years Ago

by admin September 26, 2025


Magic: The Gathering has finally come clean about one of the bigger stains on its legacy. Veteran head designer Mark Rosewater recently apologized for the misogynistic treatment of a low-level pro player in the ’90s that he immortalized as a printed card called Ghazbán Ogress. “I have had a hand in creating thousands of Magic cards over the years, and Ghazban Ogress is the one I most regret making,” he wrote in a new blog post.

Ghazbán Ogress was a parody of an existing card called Ghazbán Ogre, but its real inspiration was a woman named Catherine Nicoloff, an aspiring pro player who also dated several different top players in the ’90s Magic: The Gathering competitive scene. Part of the 1998 Unglued side-expansion, which was designed entirely by Rosewater, the card’s description read, “When Ghazban Ogress comes into play, the player who has won the most Magic games that day gains control of it.” It essentially took slut shaming that was happening in private and immortalized it in print.

This darker chapter in the card game’s history was explored in a recent video on the The Tranquil Domain YouTube channel in which Nicoloff was interviewed about it for the first time. “I just wanted to be one of the guys at the time,” she said. “That was the biggest compliment you could get is if you were one of the guys and man, when people say guys don’t gossip, boy are they lying. So, the attention was mixed, but you were always being watched. I could not go anywhere without being watched. If I went to lunch with a friend, there would be a rumor the next day that I was seen with so-and-so and I was dating him, even if I wasn’t, even if it was nothing more than a lunch where we were talking about decks or cards or draft strategy or whatever.”

I laughed at and shared that joke at the time, when I was a teenager, and it certainly can’t have made women feel welcome in the community. I think one of the worst habits that Magic embedded in me was choosing my social circle based largely on peoples’ perceived skill.

— Brian Kibler (@bmkibler) May 20, 2021

Nicoloff said Rosewater took her aside during one even to give her a heads-up that the Ghazbán Ogress card would be coming out. “Mark Rosewater wielded enormous power over the game and continues to do so,” she said. “I was just, you know, a a small-time wannabe pro player. So, at that moment, it this is going to sound melodramatic, but it just kind of broke me a little because I had thought Mark was a friend. I thought he was trying to be humorous, but [that] he had the best interests of the players at heart. And now I’d been handed this tiger by the tail, and I had to either ride it or get eaten by it. That was what Mark gave to me.”

She ended up signing some other people’s copies of the card while also trying to collect as many of them as possible to keep it from spreading. Nicoloff reckons she has two binder pages full of Ghazbán Ogress now. It wasn’t until a viral post about the incident four years ago by Magic player Brian Kibler that she wanted to correct the record about what a gross thing it was. “I admit I still felt just a little bit angry and a little bit hurt by the whole thing because this was like an elephant in the room and nobody had ever apologized to me.”

That changed after the video went live and people started asking Rosewater about it. In a post over on his blog he unequivocally apologized for it. “Let me start by stating unequivocally that it was a mistake to have ever printed the card. It is 100% my doing,” he wrote. “I designed it and put it into the set. I take full responsibility for the card’s existence. It’s important to own up to one’s mistakes and not try to justify them.”

Rosewater has since called Nicoloff to apologize 27 years later, an apology which he said she accepted. “This apology should have come decades earlier though, and for that I am also sorry,” he wrote. “Magic cards should be something that bring people together and help foster growth and connection,” he added. “It should never be used to tear people down.”





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September 26, 2025 0 comments
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The Gathering' Draft May Bring More Crossover Sets
Gaming Gear

The Gathering’ Draft May Bring More Crossover Sets

by admin September 22, 2025


Spider-Man has just come to Magic: The Gathering, but the card game already has other crossovers planned, and different ways to implement them.

Just before the latest Universes Beyond set came to shelves, Magic senior game designer Corey Bowen broke down the new Pick Two Draft, a four-person format (as opposed to the standard eight) which sees players take two cards from their Play Boosters and pass them to their left and right. Bowen explained the developers chose this new way to play as away to help casual players coming into Magic and those linking up in four-person groups. But it also has the added bonus of facilitating smaller Universes Beyond sets in the future.

“How could we represent an amazing corner of the Marvel Universe without trying to fill over 300 card concepts?” wrote Bowen. “If we were focusing only on Spider-Man, there are tons of great stories, characters, and depth, but not enough to meet the demanding threshold of a full Magic set. We also believed solving this problem now would allow us to consider more partnerships that may not to fill the shoes of a full Magic set.”

That Bowen calls out “more partnerships” as a reason for Pick Two is interesting, since Magic: The Gathering has been pushing Universes Beyond collaborations hard in recent years with full sets based on major IP like Final Fantasy and Doctor Who. Days ago, we also learned New York Comic-Con will have a panel announcing a new team-up between Magic and Nicklodeon, its third following ones between Spongebob Squarepants (for Secret Lair) and Avatar: The Last Airbender. Not every Nick IP is as big now as they were back in the day (or are that deep), potentially providing a perfect use case for Pick Two.

The Nickelodeon x Magic panel will be held on October 10, where we’ll find out what it is and just how big. And if it’s not this that gets the Pick Two treatment, we’ll eventually learn what Universes Beyond crossover it’ll be.

Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.



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September 22, 2025 0 comments
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Spider-Man Magic: The Gathering Set Restocked Ahead Of Next Week's Launch
Game Updates

Spider-Man Magic: The Gathering Set Restocked Ahead Of Next Week’s Launch

by admin September 16, 2025



Spider-Man swings into the Magic: The Gathering universe next week in the latest crossover set. Most of the MTG Spider-Man products have been sold out since preorders opened back in March, but Amazon has restocked the Marvel’s Spider-Man Play Booster Box and is offering a discount. Normally $209.70, the 30-pack Booster Box is available to preorder for $192 ahead of the Spider-Man set’s September 26 release.

If you’re interested in picking up the Marvel’s Spider-Man Bundle, the Gift Bundle, or Spidey’s Spectacular Showdown Scene Box, we’d recommend checking the links below frequently. Amazon has restocked all three recently. Unfortunately, these Spider-Man MTG products never remain in stock for very long, which isn’t surprising since this is a crossover set starring arguably the most popular superhero in the world.

Magic: The Gathering x Marvel’s Spider-Man:

Take a closer look at all of the upcoming Spider-Man Magic: The Gathering TCG products below. If you’re still looking for cards from Magic’s exceedingly popular Final Fantasy crossover, check out our Final Fantasy x Magic: The Gathering restock tracker. At the time of writing, Amazon has the Starter Kit in stock for $20 and deals on the Commander Decks. You can even get the Commander Deck Bundle for a massive $110 discount that drops the price to $170 (was $280). We’ve rounded up more Magic: The Gathering TCG crossover sets at the bottom of this story, including Avatar: The Last Airbender, which is slated to launch November 21.

$192 (was $209.70)

Magic: The Gathering’s Spider-Man Play Booster Box includes 30 packs. With Amazon’s current preorder discount, you’re saving close to $20. In total, you’ll get 420 Spider-Man-themed MTG cards in each Play Booster Box.

Here’s the breakdown of the card types you’ll pull in each 14-card pack. Each pack also includes a non-foil double-sided token.

  • 6–7 Commons
  • 3 Uncommons
  • 1 Wildcard of any rarity
  • 1 Rare or Mythic Rare
  • 1 Traditional Foil Card of any rarity
  • 1 Basic Land
  • 0–1 MAR

$42

Spidey’s Spectacular Showdown Scene Box includes three Marvel’s Spider-Man booster packs as well as two different sets of six scene cards. You’ll get six Traditional Foil Borderless Scene Cards that you can use when playing the card game. The artwork on those cards is also found on six Art-Only Scene Cards. The art cards aren’t playable, but the Scene Box comes with a display easel to showcase the artwork. Together, the six cards form a cohesive scene featuring Spider-Man and a handful of Marvel villains.

Here are the Scene Cards you’ll find in the box alongside your display easel and trio of booster packs:

  • Grasping Tentacles
  • Venom, Deadly Devourer
  • Green Goblin, Nemesis
  • Doc Ock, Evil Inventor
  • Sensational Spider-Man
  • Pumpkin Bombs

$70

The Marvel’s Spider-Man Bundle has been difficult to find since preorders for the set opened in early March. This isn’t too surprising since MTG Bundles come with nine booster packs valued at $63 as well as numerous other goodies, including a promo art card, a Spidey-themed storage box, and everything you need to start building your deck to play the trading card game.

Here’s the full list of items included in the Marvel’s Spider-Man Bundle:

  • 9 booster packs (14 cards each)
  • 30 Basic Land Cards (15 Foil, 15 Non-foil)
  • 1 Traditional Foil Alternate-Art Promo Card
  • 2 Reference Cards
  • 1 Spindown Life Counter
  • 1 Spider-Man Storage Box

$90

The $90 Gift Bundle has largely been sold out since preorders opened, but Amazon has restocked it numerous times. The only problem is these restocks always seem to sell out in minutes, so you really need to get lucky.

The Gift Bundle comes with everything that’s in the regular bundle as well as a Collector Booster Pack with 15 Rare, Foil, and Special Treatment cards. Another cool aspect is the box itself. The Gift Bundle recreates the cover of Amazing Fantasy #15 (August 1962), the first appearance of Spider-Man.

  • 1 Collector Booster Pack (15 cards)
  • 9 Booster Packs (14 cards each)
  • 30 Basic Land Cards (15 Foil, 15 Non-foil)
  • 1 Traditional Foil Alternate-Art Promo Card
  • 2 Reference Cards
  • 1 Spindown Life Counter
  • 1 Spider-Man Storage Box

$40

Magic: The Gathering Collector Booster Packs are geared more toward enthusiast collectors, but these expensive boosters typically include some very cool foil cards. The $40 Collector Booster features 15 cards and an art card or traditional foil double-sided token:

  • 5 Traditional Foil Commons
  • 4 Traditional Foil Uncommons
  • 1 Traditional Foil Basic Land
  • 1 Traditional Foil Rare or Mythic Rare
  • 2 Non-foil Booster Fun Rare or Mythic Rare cards
  • 1 MAR card
  • 1 Traditional Foil Booster Fun Rare or Mythic Rare

$430

The Collector Booster Box comes with 12 of the $40 Collector Booster Packs detailed above. Though prices have varied–we’ve seen $430-$455–you’re likely to “save” by buying the pricey packs by the dozen versus individually. That said, just like the Collector Booster Pack, this has been sold out for months.

Magic: The Gathering Crossover Sets: What’s in stock now?

Magic: The Gathering x Final Fantasy

Magic: The Gathering 2025 Crossover Sets:

Final Fantasy x Magic: The Gathering Set – In stock

Magic: The Gathering Commander Decks come with 100 cards, a 2-card Collector Booster Sample Pack, a deck box, and everything else you need to play MTG’s popular Commander format.

Avatar: The Last Airbender x Magic: The Gathering Set – In stock

Preorders for Avatar: The Last Airbender’s crossover set sold out fast in August. Only two products have been available to preorder in recent weeks.

Amazon also has products from a few older Magic: The Gathering crossover sets in stock. Notably, retailer recently restocked Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth Commander Decks. Two of the four have sold out, but you can you can still get Riders of Rohan and Elven Council Commander Decks for $50 or less.

The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth Commander Decks:

Tales of Middle-earth Scene Boxes are also available for right around normal price ($41) from third-party resellers (shipped by Amazon).

The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth Scene Boxes:

The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth Commander Deck

Fallout x Magic: The Gathering Set – In stock

Last year’s Fallout crossover set is available for low prices thanks to Amazon’s Commander Deck Bundle deal that drops the price from $240 down to $155. You can also get individual Fallout Commander Decks for as low as $40.

Doctor Who x Magic: The Gathering Set – In stock

Only two of the Doctor Who Commander Decks are available for great prices: Blast from the Past for $35 and Paradox Power for $40. The other two Commander Decks in the Doctor Who MTG crossover set are selling for $68-$75.

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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Final Fantasy 7 Remake For Switch 2 Comes With Magic: The Gathering Cards
Game Updates

Final Fantasy 7 Remake For Switch 2 Comes With Magic: The Gathering Cards

by admin September 15, 2025



Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade is up for preorder for Nintendo Switch 2 at Amazon and Best Buy. In somewhat of a surprise, the upcoming port retails for only $40. FF7 Remake Intergrade launches January 22, 2026, on Nintendo Switch 2 as well as Xbox Series X|S. Square Enix is only releasing a physical version for Switch 2. It comes with a bunch of in-game bonuses and a Magic: The Gathering Final Fantasy Play Booster Pack.

Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade – Switch 2 Edition Preorder Bonuses

Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade for Nintendo Switch 2

The physical and digital editions of FF7 Remake Intergrade for Switch 2 include the Intermission DLC featuring Yuffie and the following pieces of in-game content:

  • Weapon: Cacstar
  • Armor:
    • Midgar Bangle
    • Shinra Bangle
    • Corneo Armlet
  • Accessories:
    • Superstar Belt
    • Mako Crystal
    • Seraphic Earrings
  • Summoning Materia:
    • Carbuncle
    • Chocobo Chick
    • Cactuar

$40 | Releases January 22, 2026

As mentioned, the physical edition for Switch 2 also comes with a Magic: The Gathering Play Booster containing 14 cards from the exceedingly popular Final Fantasy crossover set. The physical edition also has reversible cover art: One side features Cloud and Sephiroth, while the other shows Cloud looking at the Shinra building.

Like other Square Enix games for Switch 2, Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade is a Game-Key Card, so you will need to download the file from the eShop after inserting the card. In this case, though, Square likely didn’t have a choice. The Switch 2 uses 64GB game cards, and FF7 Remake Intergrade is currently listed at 87.9GB–the largest Switch 2 game yet.

If you don’t already own a microSD Express Card, you may want to buy one ahead of time, because many players won’t have enough space on the Switch 2’s 256GB SSD to download the game. We’ve highlighted two microSD Express Card options below.

The officially licensed Samsung 256GB microSD Express Card is back in stock at Amazon for $59. To triple your storage space, check out the SanDisk Gameplay 512GB microSD Express Card for $78 at Walmart. It’s substantially cheaper than most 512GB microSD Express Cards.

If you’re interested in Final Fantasy Magic: The Gathering Cards, Amazon has the Starter Kit in stock and is offering nice deals on the Commander Decks, including a $110 discount on the Commander Deck Bundle that comes with all four.

More Nintendo Direct Preorders

Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade was one of two Square Enix RPGs shown off during the September Nintendo Direct. Ironically, the other one was also a remake of the seventh mainline entry in a classic turn-based RPG series: Dragon Quest VII Reimagined. The significantly overhauled new version of the PS1 classic launches February 5 on consoles and PC.

Below, you’ll find a list of games shown off during the Nintendo Direct that you can preorder now. We also created Amazon hubs where you can browse all of the games and the new Amiibo figures in one place.

Nintendo Direct Preorders:

Nintendo Switch 1/2 Game Preorders

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September 15, 2025 0 comments
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Lord Of The Rings Magic: The Gathering Commander Decks Restocked At Amazon
Game Updates

Lord Of The Rings Magic: The Gathering Commander Decks Restocked At Amazon

by admin September 7, 2025



Magic: The Gathering’s Lord of the Rings set is back in stock at Amazon. The retailer has Tales of Middle-earth Commander Decks for huge discounts compared to launch prices. The LOTR Commander Decks sold for $70 when the crossover set launched in June 2023, but Amazon is selling them for around $50 each. And if you’re also interested in the recently released Final Fantasy set, Amazon has the Final Fantasy Commander Deck Bundle for $175 (was $280), a new all-time low.

The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth Commander Decks:

The first three Commander Decks in the list above are shipped and sold by Amazon. Unfortunately, the fourth is currently sold out, but Amazon briefly had it in stock a couple weeks ago, so it’s worth checking the link just in case. Also, while Amazon normally doesn’t accept returns for trading cards, Riders of Rohan is listed as eligible for free returns.

Each Commander Deck comes with 100 Lord of the Rings-themed cards, including 20 unique cards you won’t find in any other Lord of the Rings MTG product. Commander Decks also include a foil-etched display card of the Commander on the box and a Collector Booster Sample Pack with two cards: one rare or higher Traditional Foil or special treatment card and one Traditional Foil special treatment common or uncommon card. You’ll also get the following accessories: deck box, 10 double-sided tokens, Helper card, Life Wheel, strategy insert, and reference card.

Tales of Middle-earth and other Lord of the Rings MTG cards are often only available via third-party resellers. This means prices tend to jump around quite a bit. While it’s not uncommon to find Scene Boxes for reasonable prices, Commander Decks can be a different story.

More MTG Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth Items:

Magic: The Gathering – The Lord of the Rings: Tales of Middle-earth Scene Box

Tales of Middle-earth Scene Boxes are available for $39-$45 at Amazon. They are shipped by Amazon but are sold by resellers. The Scene Boxes launched with $41 price tags, so you won’t be overpaying if you pick one up. Each Scene Box includes: 6 Traditional Foil Borderless Scene Cards, 6 Art Cards, 3 Set Boosters, and a paper easel display.

2025 Magic: The Gathering Crossover Sets

Magic: The Gathering 2025 crossover sets

Check stock at Amazon:

It’s already been a massive year for crossover sets in Magic: The Gathering. The Final Fantasy set became the best-selling set in MTG history before its June release. Many Final Fantasy MTG products remain difficult to find for normal prices, but you can get Commander Decks and the Starter Kit. Marvel superhero Spider-Man slings into the MTG universe on September 26. Like with Final Fantasy, preorders have mostly been sold out for months, but Amazon recently restocked the Spider-Man Play Booster Box. Rounding out the year of crossovers is Avatar: The Last Airbender on November 21. Preorders opened in August, and most products sold out within a few days. As of September 5, the Beginner Box and Jumpstart Booster Box are in stock.

Final Fantasy MTG: In-stock at Amazon

Spider-Man MTG: In-stock at Amazon

Avatar: The Last Airbender MTG: In-stock at Amazon

One of last year’s crossover sets is also in stock for a great price at Amazon. The Fallout Commander Deck Bundle is up for grabs for $155, which is close to an all-time low.

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September 7, 2025 0 comments
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Jesse Hamilton
NFT Gaming

U.S. Treasury Starts Work on Stablecoin Law, Gathering Views on Illicit Activity

by admin August 18, 2025



The U.S. Treasury Department is seeking new ideas for detecting and cutting off illicit crypto activity as it begins to put the new stablecoin law into effect.

The Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act — the first major U.S. law to erect a regulatory system in the crypto space — called for government action on limiting dangers from bad actors in digital assets, and the Treasury Department is asking for public comments “to identify innovative or novel methods, techniques, or strategies that regulated financial institutions use, or have the potential to use, to detect illicit activity, such as money laundering, involving digital assets.”

The crypto sector will have a 60-day comment window to share industry views on clamping down on shady crypto use, according to the department’s request on Monday.

The GENIUS Act is now entering into what is typically a protracted period of implementation when a new financial-regulation law enters the arena of the federal agencies that need to put it into effect. The U.S. banking regulations, such as the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will also have policies to work out in the future oversight of stablecoin issuers.

But GENIUS was only the first and less significant piece of the two-part legislative priority for the crypto industry. The sector still awaits further action from Congress on the bill that would set up guardrails for the wider digital assets markets. The House of Representatives was in the lead in recently passing its Digital Asset Market Clarity Act with a wide bipartisan vote, but when the Senate returns from its summer break, it’ll take the reins in shaping that legislation under a slightly different approach than the House.

President Donald Trump has pushed his administration into rapidly crafting crypto-friendly policies, issuing multiple executive orders and statements driving federal regulators to set standards after years of resistance and legal challenges from the U.S. government. Agency heads such as Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins have suggested that they can get some of the work done even before Congress finishes its crypto tasks.

Read More: Trump Signs GENIUS Act Into Law, Elevating First Major Crypto Effort to Become Policy



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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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