The Most Interesting Magic Cards from Masters 25
Art courtesy of Wizards of the Coast
Magic’s Masters 25 has been out for a few weeks, and after careful consideration I have finally compiled my list of the Most Interesting cards in the set. In general, the set has a much higher ratio of interesting cards due to what it is celebrating. You see, Magic has been around for 25 years, and this is a set that is chock full of cards from the game’s past in a bid to make us remember all the good times. Remember I did, a pure shot of heartwarming remembrance that ever so briefly quieted the calamitous din of this world we’ve somehow created, and in that moment I felt a fleeting sensation of what it means to be young and free. And that is what I call magic.
Here are all the most interesting cards from Magic: The Gathering’s Masters 25.
10. Promise of Bunrei
I love a good story that’s told through a combination of art and mechanics, and Promise of Bunrei is exactly that. Are you in need of some allies? If you strike this samurai down, then they shall become more powerful than you can ever imagine. Or, well, they will become four spirits. It’s a wonderful little self-contained story about someone sacrificing themselves so that they can bring allies back from the afterlife with them. It’s good!
9. Primal Clay
I love cards that have choices baked into them, and Primal Clay is a great example of a card that can literally be molded to the situation you need to use it in. Need a good blocker so that you can make a big play next turn? Shape that clay! Want to get really aggressive? Make that clay do what you want it to! I also love that the art is positioning the clay in some kind of museum setting, suggesting that it is just waiting for the right moment to strike.
8. Prossh, Skyraider of Kher
The Kobolds of Kher Keep are some silly little ineffectual dudes who have been kicking around for the past 25 years of Magic, so it makes sense that there might be some kind of giant creature who preys on them. Wonderfully, when Prossh arrives on the scenes, a bunch of kobolds scramble up out of the ground. “Look,” they scream, “that big ole fella is flying around again!” Then, one by one, Prossh gobbles them up to get supercharged with vicious attack power. It’s a good image.
7. Ambassador Oak
This is literally a treefolk ambassador. It’s like if Treebeard had to show up at the United Nations. The treefolk is so well-liked, however, that it’s got an elf just living up in its branches. A buddy elf, as it were, to make up for the lack of hobbits in the world of Magic: The Gathering. It’s a powerful card, of course, and it makes for some great plays, but really this card is all about the story of a well-liked, walking, talking tree.