When Do Sets Rotate Out Standard In MTG?

When Do Sets Rotate Out Standard In MTG?
Views: 0

Magic: The Gathering has dozens of ways to play, known as formats. However, there’s only one that has the honour of being considered the game’s primary, premiere format, and that’s Standard.

Related


Every Upcoming Magic: The Gathering Release

There’s always something new on the horizon for Magic: The Gathering.

Competitive and always-changing, Standard is best known for its unique set rotation that lets cards always remain fresh. But how does rotation work, and when will cards from your favourite set finally leave Standard?

What Is Standard?

Daretti, Rocketeer Engineer by Borja Pindado
Daretti, Rocketeer Engineer by Borja Pindado

Standard is a format (a set of rules and way of playing) for Magic: The Gathering. More importantly, it is often described as Magic’s premiere format, and is the one most of the game’s releases are built to cater to.

Standard comprises the previous few years’ major premiere releases. These are the six main releases of the year, but don’t include supplementary sets like Commander Masters or Jumpstart.

Standard is a competitive, one-on-one format. Both players start at 20 life, and, using decks of at least 60 cards, try and either knock their opponent down or win through an alternate win condition.

Unlike a singleton format, such as Commander, Standard decks can have up to four copies of the same card in them.

Standard differs from most other formats in that it rotates. Sets only have a span of a few years in Standard, before they rotate out to make room for other cards. Through this, Magic can balance Standard more easily, and ensure each set has the biggest impact on the format possible.

When Does Standard Rotate?

Ajani, Caller of the Pride by Victor Adame Minguez
Ajani, Caller of the Pride by Victor Adame Minguez

Traditionally, Standard rotates each year with the release of the fall set. In 2024, this was Bloomburrow, and in 2023 it was Wilds of Eldraine. This remained true in 2025, with Standard rotating out with the launch of Edge of Eternities on August 1.

However, rotation will be changing from 2027. Instead of following the Magic year, which runs from fall set to fall set, it will follow calendar years, and will instead rotate with the first set of 2027. This means there will be no Standard rotation in 2026.

Sets remain in Standard for around three years, lasting through two rotations after their release. With the third rotation, they leave the format and are no longer legal. This does mean that some sets remain legal for longer than others, but it also means you only need to update Standard decks once a year.

Glarb, Calamity's Augur by Bram Sels
Glarb, Calamity’s Augur by Bram Sels

These are every known set that is either currently legal in Standard, or will be legal in Standard when they launch.

Set

Rotates Out

Dominaria United

Fall 2025, with the launch of Edge Of Eternities.

The Brothers War

Phyrexia: All Will Be One

March Of The Machine

March Of The Machine: The Aftermath

Wilds Of Eldraine

Q1 2027

The Lost Caverns Of Ixalan

Murders At Karlov Manor

Outlaws Of Thunder Junction

Outlaws Of Thunder Junction: The Big Score

Bloomburrow

Duskmourn: House Of Horror

Aetherdrift

Q1 2028

Tarkir: Dragonstorm

Final Fantasy

Spider-man

Edge Of Eternities

Avatar: The Last Airbender

“Return To Lorwyn” (Name TBA)

Q1 2029

“Return To Arcavios” (Name TBA)

Foundations

Q1 2029, likely to be extended beyond that.

2026’s changes to rotation mean that, unfortunately, Bloomburrow and Duskmourn: House Of Horror have a shorter time in Standard than other sets. They will rotate approximately seven months earlier than they would have under the previous system.

What Happens To Cards When They Rotate Out Of Standard?

New Capenna key art by Benjamin Ee, showing the five demon lords stood in an art-deco city.

While you can’t play rotated-out cards in Standard, Standard is only one way of playing Magic: The Gathering. Other formats, such as Pioneer, Modern, Vintage, and Legacy, do not rotate, and so cards from your old Standard sets could be used in them.

There is also, of course, Commander, which only allows you to use one of any card, but allows you to use any legal card printed. Commander does not follow Standard rotation either, and is casual enough to allow for even lower-powered Standard cards to be playable.

Next


Magic: The Gathering – 10 Most Valuable Sol Rings

Sol Ring is one of the most popular Magic: The Gathering cards around, and there are some pretty pricey ones you can add to your deck.

Source link