On Thursday, Wizards of the Coast published the release notes for Masters 25 in every language. Or, rather, they tried to. In at least one of those languages, they accidentally published the release notes for the upcoming Dominaria expansion instead. The internet being what it is, once this information was discovered, it spread rapidly. Wizards, recognizing their error, published the Dominaria release notes in all of their languages that evening, sparing everyone from having to deal with Google Translate's best attempt at Simplified Chinese Magic cards.
The result is that we now know every major theme and mechanic from this upcoming expansion, along with the text of over 140 of the cards. It appears Dominaria is taking a heavily nostalgic approach, reminiscent of Time Spiral-though without the ungodly plethora of mechanics. It also has a strong legends-matter theme to it, which draws immediate parallels to both the Kamigawa block and the Legends expansion. So far, the execution already looks better than both. Walk with us as we explore the lore behind all of the new cards, with contributions from void_nothing, Jay13x, and sev8.
Legendary Sorceries
The first legends-matter mechanic Dominaria introduces is legendary sorceries. These sorceries represent major events from the history of Magic's past. To fuel their power, they require that you control either a legendary creature or a planeswalker in order to cast them.
Darigaaz, the Igniter by Mark Zug
Primevals' Glorious Rebirth represents the climax of the Planeshift set story, where Darigaaz, the Ingiter and the other Primeval dragons emerge as unstoppable god-dragons.
Urza's Ruinous Blast represents Urza wielding the Golgothian Sylex with his freshly unlocked magic to devastate the entire plane, ending the Brothers' War, sealing Dominaria into the Shard of the Twelve Worlds, starting the Ice Age and preventing Phyrexia from invading Dominaria for thousands of years.
Karn's Temporal Sundering represents Karn's ability to travel through time. He was built by Urza and Barrin after they realized that only silver could survive traveling through a temporal portal, a realization portrayed on Stroke of Genius. Karn has since traveled through time several times, including during The Mending, where he traveled back to the Phyrexian Invasion to close a time rift before it could expand. This is likely the event represented on Karn's Temporal Sundering. It is also possible that this is a depiction of the event previously seen on Sunder, given the name correlation, when a time machine Karn was using exploded.
Jaya's Immolating Inferno is a key spell of Jaya Ballard, Task Mage. While there doesn't appear to be a direct link to the story as of yet, Jaya has shown up in the flavor text of many, many burn spells, including Inferno and Incinerate, and this is precisely the kind of magic she utilizes.
Kamahl's Druidic Vow represents Kamahl, Pit Fighter forswearing his violent life and dedicating himself to a path of harmony with nature, as seen on Kamahl, Fist of Krosa, surrendering the Mirari in the process.
Sagas
Also present in this set are new Saga enchantments. While these are not themselves legendary, they represent important stories in Dominaria's history. Each Saga enters the battlefield with a lore counter and gains an additional lore counter each turn. Every time it gains a lore counter, it triggers one of its "chapter" abilities, and after the third counter, it's sacrificed. These cards are clearly inspired by the original Planeswalker design that was tested back in Future Sight, as well as the structure mechanic that was tested and ultimately cut from Ravnica.
Thran Tome by Mark Zug
Fall of the Thran represents one of the earliest chronicled periods in Magic's history. Nearly five thousand years before the Brothers' War, the Thran were a powerful and technologically advanced empire. After the Thran healer Yawgmoth's initial rise to power as ruler of Phyrexia, he seized control of the Thran capitol and slaughtered the population for the raw materials for his freshly-minted Phyrexian army. Thus began the Thran Civil War and the eventual downfall of the empire and first sealing of the planar portal to Phyrexia.
The Antiquities War, also known as The Brothers' War, is one of the most famous events in Magic's history. It's chronicled in the Antiquities expansion as well as parts of the Urza's Saga block. Nearly five thousand years after the fall of the Thran, the nation of Argive began a comprehensive archaeological dig and restoration of Thran technology, leading to the technological milieu Urza and Mishra were born into. After discovering the Mightstone and Weakstone, and Mishra being exposed to the Phyrexian-demon Gix's corrupting influence, the two brothers began a massive war fueled by an artifice arms race. When Urza finally came into his Planeswalker-level powers and realized Phyrexia's involvement, he ended the war with the Sylex blast, as seen above.
This, of course, lead to The Time of Ice, also known as the Ice Age. During this time, Dominaria and eleven other planes were sealed off from the greater multiverse in something known as The Shard. Dominaria itself was subject to world-sweeping climate change that covered most of the world in ice and snow.
The Ice Age ended when the Planeswalker Freyalise utilized the energy of Shandalar, which was the only plane capable of moving in and out of The Shard, to cast the World Spell. This broke The Shard, releasing the plane from the Ice Age, an act depicted on Song of Freyalise.
After the ending of the Ice Age, Torsten Von Ursus founded the nation of Benalia out of the ruins of the Sheoltun Empire. The empire of Benalia, after his death, would survive for thousands of years, playing a pivotal role in both the Invasion and Time Spiral storylines. History of Benalia represents the military conquest of the shattered nation and its forging into an enduring ideal.
Phyrexian Scriptures is emblematic of Phyrexia's all-consuming, all-corrupting influence. It's not clear yet what exact sequence of events the card refers to-it could be Yawgmoth's initial rise to power during the Thran era, the corruption of Mishra during the Brothers' War, or the creation of Rath and its overlay onto Dominaria for the Phyrexian Invasion. Regardless, it does an excellent job of capturing Phyrexia's modus operandi-convert flesh to metal, eliminate the remaining flesh, and then pave over whatever remains.
Cover of The Duelist #28 by Terese Nielsen
Triumph of Gerrard could represent one of several moments from Gerrard Capashen's storyline, starting in the Weatherlight set and continuing through the end of Apocalypse, but it's likely it represents his final victory over Yawgmoth at the culmination of the Phyrexian Invasion.
After Yawgmoth's defeat, Karn, Silver Golem ascended to Planeswalker status, absorbing a spark from Urza's two powerstones. He left a probe on Dominaria as he exercised his newfound power to explore the Multiverse. The probe, which came to be known as the Mirari, began leaking potent energy. The mortals of the Otarian empire quickly seized on the Mirari as a powerful source of energy, resulting in lots of infighting over who would keep control of it. This plot unfolded in the Odyssey block and is depicted here on The Mirari Conjecture.
Chainer, Dementia Master eventually become the owner of the Mirari and used it to take revenge on those who had wronged him. He created powerful monstrosities from the orb's power, including Laquatus's Champion, Burke. This series of events, representing the set Torment, are depicted on the Saga Chainer's Torment.
The last few Sagas revealed thus far are a little less clear on what they depict, but we can still make some reasonable inferences. The Eldest Reborn likely refers to Nicol Bolas's resurrection during Time Spiral. The First Eruption may cover the birth of Shiv, a volcanic region of Dominaria heavily mined for powerstones. The Flame of Keld references the nation of Keld, which features prominently in much of the Urza's Saga block, Prophecy and Invasion block storylines.
Historic
Dominaria introduces another mechanic that ties Sagas in with legends. "Historic" as a descriptor refers to all artifacts, legendary spells, and Saga enchantments. This descriptor can then be used to modify spells, as on Jhoira's Familiar; trigger off of spells, as on Mishra's Self-Replicator; describe permanents, as on Curator's Ward or Sentinel of the Pearl Trident; or describe cards in other zones, as on Urza's Tome. Historic provides a great outlet for making legendary cards matter while not being overly narrow due to the inclusion of a widespread card type (artifacts) and the Sagas to boot.
There's also Mox Amber, a new mox that requires you have a (colored) legendary creature or planeswalker to use.
The Legends and Planeswalkers
Dominaria has promised that legends-matter will be done better than Champions of Kamigawa by guaranteeing a slot in every booster pack that will contain a legendary creature. To fulfill this, there's a huge slew of these creatures already revealed. Some of these are well-known, returning characters. Others reference past characters, organizations, and events. Still others are complete unknowns.
Returning Characters
While over 60 years have passed since The Mending, an act which made all current planeswalkers lose their godlike powers, including immortality, there are a lot of characters that have survived this time through various methods. All three of the planeswalkers in the set are returning characters.
Vindicate by Brian Snõddy
Karn, Scion of Urza is a silver golem, originally created by Urza to facilitate his time travel experiments and later to serve as the vessel for the Legacy Weapon. At the climax of Apocalypse, Urza and Gerrard channel a huge white-mana blast from the Null Moon through Karn and the compiled Legacy to destroy Yawgmoth, an act portrayed on Vindicate. This process kills both Gerrard and Urza, but Karn survives and ascends as a Planeswalker. After the events of Scourge, Karn took the Mirari to Argentum, an artifical world which would later become Mirrodin. Unbeknownst to him, he also seeded some Phyrexian oil in the process, setting the stage for the eventual rise of New Phyrexia. During Time Spiral, he traveled back in time to when Barrin, Master Wizard Obliterated Tolaria, closing that temporal rift before it could grow and become too large to manage. When he felt a corrupting influence taking hold of him, he planeswalked away, winding up in Mirrodin's Core, where he became hailed as the new Father of the Machines by the growing Phyrexian presence. The oil eventually corrupted him completely, consuming his spark and his heart. All seemed lost until Venser, the Sojourner sacrificed his own life to purify Karn and grant him his spark. This was the last we'd seen of Karn until he resurfaced on Dominaria. The card itself seems exceptionally powerful, costing only four mana and having multiple, immediately-usable ways to generate card advantage. This makes it a good fit for Legacy's fast-mana decks like Dragon Stompy or Eldrazi Aggro, which run several lands that can produce multiple colorless mana and often sacrifice card advantage to ramp out threats using cards like Chrome Mox or Simian Spirit Guide. Karn has shown up previously as Karn, Silver Golem and Karn Liberated.
Jaya Ballard by Yongjae Choi
Jaya Ballard, the Task Mage, was a key player during the Ice Age block. During Planar Chaos, Jodah believed that Jaya had perished. Jaya had, at one point, inspired the monastery at Keral Keep on Regatha, where Chandra Nalaar had trained after her spark awakened. Jaya is one of the few surviving characters who does not have any form of immortality or eternal youth, and as such, she appears as an elderly woman. Jaya has shown up previously as Jaya Ballard, Task Mage.
Teferi, Hero of Dominaria was a pivotal character in the Weatherlight saga, highly versed in temporal magic and the art of phasing. At the brink of the Phyrexian Invasion, he phased out a large chunk of Dominaria, including Shiv and Zhalfir, sparing their inhabitants from the coming war. During Time Spiral, he returned to help close the time rifts and to phase Shiv (successfully) and Zhalfir (unsuccessfully back in, but in doing so, lost his spark. It is currently unknown how Teferi regained his spark in the interim or whether and how he has managed to remain youthful-possibly through the use of temporal or phasing magic. Teferi has shown up previously as Teferi, Mage of Zhalfir and Teferi, Temporal Archmage.
As far as legendary creatures go, there are several returning as well:
Jhoira, Weatherlight Captain was a student of the Tolarian Academy alongside Teferi. She was the first captain of the Weatherlight and appears to have resumed that role. She was partly responsible for the temporal disaster at the original Academy, which left it in ruins but enabled her to gain a nigh-eternal lifespan by drinking slow-time water. She aided in closing the time rifts during Time Spiral and has shown up previously as Jhoira of the Ghitu. Jhoira is also notable here in that she is the first blue/red legendary creature to care about artifacts, having a historic trigger. This is something Commander players have been asking for for a long time.
Jodah, Archmage Eternal was a key player during The Dark and the Ice Age block. He was one of the primary contributors to Freyalise's World Spell that broke The Shard and ended the Ice Age. He was also present during the Phyrexian Invasion and helped restore Urza's sanity during that time. Jodah helped to close the time rifts during Planar Chaos. Jodah hid in the Fountain of Youth, whose waters granted him nigh-eternal life. Jodah has never appeared on a single card before.
Squee, Goblin Nabob by Greg Staples
Squee, the Immortal is a goblin who was part of the original Weatherlight crew. When he was captured by the Phyrexians, they did not perceive him as a threat and granted him the ability to come back from the dead so that they could kill him indefinitely. However, this enabled him to accidentally kill Ertai, the Corrupted and escape. His immortality apparently extends to today, which has allowed him to survive the hundreds of years between the end of the Phyrexian Invasion and today. He has previously appeared on Squee, Goblin Nabob.
Multani, Yavimaya's Avatar is the Maro-Sorcerer of Yavimaya. Multani is one of Gaea's greatest servants and the very soul of his land. He was a key fighter on the Dominarian side during the Phyrexian Invasion. His counterpart in Llanowar was Molimo. He previously appeared on the card Multani, Maro-Sorcerer, and as an elemental avatar, he is eternal.
Darigaaz Reincarnated first appeared as Darigaaz, the Igniter (in full Rhammigdarigaaz), one of the five Primeval dragons who would ascend to godhood. He was the demigod dragon of conception whose mother Gherridarigaaz was a friend to Urza. However, Darigaaz had a conscience and refused to allow the other four Primevals to wreak havoc on Dominaria after their full godhood was achieved and killed himself to break the spell. However, being part-god, he could not fully die and thus has reincarnated.
Grand Warlord Radha first appeared as Radha, Heir to Keld and is a half-elf Keldon war leader of the Time Spiral era who helped in the fixing of the rift crisis. A latent Planeswalker, her spark was forever extinguished as part of closing the rifts. She remained a powerful figure and eventually rose to lead the rebuilt Keld, a nation now also consisting of elf refugees. As an elf, she has a longer lifespan than humans.
Legends with Ties to the Past
Many of the new legends have references to past characters, organizations, or events.
Argivian Restoration by Roger Raupp
Baird, Steward of Argive: Argive was a highly notable city-state around the Brothers' War era. Urza and Mishra were both born here. Urza's birth is 0 AR, which stands for Argivian Reckoning, so the whole calendar is named after here. Argivian Archaeologists were responsible for rediscovering a lot of Thran tech.
Evra, Halcyon Witness: Halcyon was the capital of the Thran. It was a wondrous marvel-a floating city with the first mana rig aboard above the Caves of the Damned (later the Caves of Koilos). Halcyon was destroyed in horrible fashion at the end of the war with the Phyrexians. The Null Sphere (later Glimmer Moon and Null Moon) was sabotaged, removing its protection from the city and the citizens were all gassed to death or fled to Phyrexia only to be compleated. "Halcyon Witness" implies that Evra was witness to this catastrophe.
Kwende, Pride of Femeref: Femeref was one of the major states of Jamuraa during the Mirage Wars. It split from Zhalfir over a religious dispute: the orthodox Femeref hated and distrusted the mages of the Shadow Guild operating in Zhalfir. As a result, Femeref is home to many fanatical and disciplined Knights, called in Jamuraa askari.
Lyra Dawnbringer: Reya Dawnbringer was one of Serra's highest ranking angels and opposed Radiant's radicalism. Under Reya, many Serra Angels decided to help Urza fight the Phyrexians to save Dominarian souls. Since angels do not reproduce, Lyra is not so much a descendant of Reya as perhaps the latest holder of her office and title.
Teshar, Ancestor's Apostle: The Ancestor was the deity of the monotheistic Order of Otaria during the events of the Odyssey and Onslaught blocks. The Ancestor was thought of in somewhat abstract terms but she was a creator figure. Many aven were her champions on Dominaria; Teshar is likely the latest in this long line.
Naban, Dean of Iteration: Naban seems to be a dean at the Academy at Tolaria West, the revived version of the famous Tolarian Academy.
Naru Meha, Master Wizard: A double homage, Naru Meha has inherited Barrin's title as the master of the Academy as well as being a descendant of Kolo Meha, a famous fire mage of Madara and friend and ally of Tetsuo Umezawa in his fight against Bolas.
Toshiro Umezawa by Greg Staples
Tetsuko Umezawa, Fugitive: The Umezawa clan is highly notable and Tetsuko seems to be the latest descendant. Toshiro Umezawa was a great ronin of Kamigawa who played a pivotal part in the Kami War, and was "repaid" by his sometime-master, the Myojin of Night's Reach, by whisking him away to Madara and blinding him. He sired the Umezawa family, and his descendent, Tetsuo Umezawa, went on to defeat Nicol Bolas on Madara.
Demonlord Belzenlok: Liliana's fourth and final soul creditor, Belzenlok is also master of the Cabal in the current era after that organization's ruin during the events of Onslaught block.
Kazarov, Sengir Pureblood: The Sengir family needs little explanation, being the most famous vampire bloodline in the Multiverse. Baron Sengir was a powerful vampire that traveled the Multiverse with many Planeswalkers before being stranded on the plane of Ulgrotha. Despite this fate, he spread his bloodline to many worlds, including Dominaria.
Whisper, Blood Liturgist: Little is known about Whisper, but we can infer that they are a member of the Cabal. The Cabal grants each of its members a descriptive nickname like Braids, Cabal Minion; Chainer, Dementia Master; or The First, the Cabal Patriarch. These names seek to protect the Cabal members' true names, which can be used against them.
Verix Bladewing: The latest Bladewing dragons are Verix and Karox. The earliest known forefather was Rorix Bladewing, and they had a later ancestor in Tarox Bladewing. This is a powerful Shivan dragon dynasty known for infighting to the point of siblings eating one another.
Arvad the Cursed: We know that Arvad is part of the new Weatherlight crew. The fact that he is a vampire and his title is "the Cursed" strongly implies that he has some ties to Crovax the Cursed, a member of the original Weatherlight crew. Crovax unleashed a blood-curse upon his family after destroying an artifact that bound Selenia, Dark Angel to protect his family, in the hopes of winning her affection.
Planeswalker's Fury by Christopher Moeller
Aryel, Knight of Windgrace: Windgrace was the name of a pantherfolk noble family of Urborg. The one known Lord Windgrace was a Planeswalker and one of the Nine Titans. Windgrace may also have been the name of Crovax's family, indicating vassalage or adoption by the former family.
Rona, Disciple of Gix: Gix was a Praetor of Phyrexia who began life as a renegade Thran. Gix was Glacian's killer, Yawgmoth's right hand, and was killed after being hurled into a portal by the rebellious sleeper agent Xantcha.
Shanna, Sisay's Legacy: Captain Sisay was another of the most important figures of the Weatherlight Saga, another end result of Urza's Bloodline Project, and genetically destined to pilot her family heirloom skyship, the Weatherlight.
Slimefoot, the Stowaway: Slimefoot is a thallid, a member of a sapient fungus race that first sprung up in Havenwood during the Fallen Empires era. He appears to have stowed away on the Weatherlight and is likely responsible for the slime that Jace finds himself standing in when he planeswalks aboard.
Tiana, Ship's Caretaker: All that we know about Tiana is that she is an angel and a member of the new crew of the Weatherlight.
Brand New Legends
Torgaar, Famine Incarnate: Perhaps the deity to the Cabal after the death of the numena Kuberr?
Urgoros, the Empty One: Perhaps the master/originator of Hypnotic Specters?
Valduk, Keeper of the Flame: Keeper of the Flame was a position of some sort on Rath during the Evincarate, prior to the Overlay. Given that Rath is now part of Dominaria, maybe Valduk is a descendant of that Rathi tradition. Otherwise, they are a complete mystery.
Grunn, the Lonely King: Sapient gorillas were prevalent in Terisiare during the Ice Age, and some still existed during the Flood Age. It seems as though Grunn is a member of this race, definitely a leader of theirs, but possibly the last remaining one.
Marwyn, the Nurturer: Possibly the Emissary of Llanowar, Rofellos's former position. The name's softer pseudo-Welsh sound links it more plausibly with Llanowar Forest rather than Yavimaya Forest.
Adeliz, the Cinder Wind: Cinder Seer and Scent of Cinder have hinted at cinders being something of note on Dominaria, but they have little backstory and so Adeliz remains a mystery.
Firesong and Sunspeaker: Many minotaur clans are known in Dominarian history, especially from the Mirage era, which also features several notable songs, including The Love Song of Night and Day.
Garna, the Bloodflame: Possibly has a connection to Bloodfire Colossus, Bloodfire Dwarf, and Bloodfire Kavu, but that connection is purely speculative at the moment.
Hallar, the Firefletcher: Completely unknown at this point.
Muldrotha, the Gravetide: Another total mystery.
Despite over half the set being spoiled, nearly half the set remains, along with many mysteries. Spoilers for Dominaria start this week, so tune in to the Rumor Mill every day for the latest news!
Fun bit of lore trivia: this would be true of just about every other flight of angels in the multiverse, but Serra Planeswalker's angels were apparently capable of it if the novel Planeswalker is to be believed. This is a relatively long passage where Urza's Phyrexian companion Xantcha grills a Serran human named Sosinna about how things work on Serra's plane, including how angels and humans get along:
So there you have it! We don't have any images of male Serran angels in the game (or male angels in general outside of Amonkhet for that matter), but apparently they exist, and Serra's angels are not only born not made, but her angels were even allowed to marry humans. This is also I believe said to be the reason they were so easy for Phyrexia to corrupt, though Mirran angels are also corruptible. This actually explains a few things, like why Crovax thought he had a chance with the angel Selenia-- canonically, she was one of Serra's angels. Granted even Serran angels are very long lived or even immortal, as Selenia was with Crovax's family for generations, so Lyra dawnbringer could be merely the inheritor to the title of Dawnbringer. But she could also be a legitimate descendant of Reya Dawnbringer too. This would also totally explain how the card Angelic Destiny works!
As for Serra herself, they have yet to contradict the idea that Serra died on Ulgothra, but there was temporal shenanigans going on in Time Spiral that could allow her to come back in some form. For instance, it was implied that Jodah might have actually been a version of Jodah from another timeline, as Jhoira noted inconsistencies between the histories she had read about him and what he was actually like. For instance, he believed Jaya Ballard to be dead, but in the new set she is alive and well. In the pre-revision era, there was a similar idea that Taysir was the most powerful planeswalker because he merged five versions of himself into one being on Rabiah. So he effectively held the power of five planeswalker's sparks in one. That character also got held over into the post-revision canon and was part of Urza's Nine Titans.
They could also just print a card for her in the Commander products without bringing her back in the Jace/Gatewatch era, since that's what they did with Freyalise, who is also dead. I'm betting they will do the latter, as it requires fewer mental contortions and allows them to retain the significance of character deaths. And if they do bring her back, she will look just as old as Jaya does, and for the same reason. No more immortality for planeswalkers.
- Primevals' rebirth was one of the climaxes of Planeshift,not Invasion
- Karn's Temporal Sundering is probably the time machine explosion also depicted on Sunder, not the Tolarian rift closure.
- Sagas get counters on the beginning of the precombat main phase
- Mirari was just one of Karn's probes, and a faulty one (it shouldn't be leaking power)
Thanks, I'll get these propagated.
odah's paragraph is quite wild.
"(Jodah) was also present during the Phyrexian Invasion and helped restore Urza's sanity during that time" - this is wholly incorrect, where you got it?
- one of the primary contributous to Worldspell - not quite, he had to provide his mirror and was forced to utilize (and in the process, consume) the safe havens to distribute the excess energy of the spell to prevent another Sylex Blast.
It is debatable, whether Evra, Halcyon Witness is what we think. After all, we have seen Halcyon Glaze. But using this very particular name on Dominaria and NOT tying it to THE Halcyon would be immensely stupid.
Kolo Meha was above all a Bogardan fire mage, but with ties to Madara, of course.
Gix was not Glacian's kíller. He attacked and wounded him, but Yawgmoth "killed" him by his treattment.
The Jodah piece was paraphrased from the wiki: "300 years after the destruction of the School, Jodah visited Urza Planeswalker, who had returned to Dominaria. Urza wanted to fight the Phyrexians and their coming invasion, but was completely insane. Jodah talked to him, telling him what had happened to the plane in his absence, and played an important role in restoring Urza to sanity." But on further review it seem this was still a bit prior to Invasion.
While we're here, what was the entire story with the Baron? I know Irini Sengir isn't his daughter and Grandmother Sengir isn't his grandmother. Are they even from Dominaria?
That is *possible*, but given that they're acutely aware of the events surrounding the Thran Empire (given the presence of The Fall of the Thran), and the fact that Halcyon was the name of Thran's Capital, I think they would shy away from coincidental, non-related use of that term.
The Baron is NOT from Ulgrotha. He is from an unknown plane, he was brought to Ulgrotha by an unknown walker and stranded there. He might be originally from Dominaria, as we seen Sengir vampires there...but there is not enough info either to confirm or dismiss it.
Granny is a former planeswalker and one-time friend of the Baron who had a hand in him becoming vampire. See here: https://mtg.gamepedia.com/Ravi
More in this 12 years old article from Matt Cavotta: https://magic.wizards.com/en/articles/archive/feature/royal-bloodline-emphasis-blood-2006-02-15