Family Tradition Ended by WOTC Buy-a-Box Promo Decision

A family tradition is about to end for us! This sounds dramatic but it’s not quite as momentous as you might think. So, what happened?

WOTC this week announced that it is ending its Buy-a-Box program in early 2026. They announced their decision rather quietly in a Wizards Play Network (WPN) post a few days back. Based on “careful review,” they plan to sunset the program with Lorwyn Eclipsed, the first set to come out next year.

The Buy-a-Box program provided a bonus card with each booster box purchased at an LGS. The cards offered were not always spectacular but there some some pretty desirable ones as well. Both Nexus of Fate and Kenrith, The Returned King spring to mind as good examples of some great card to come through the program.

The program ran for 17 years, longer than the family has been playing Magic. No reason was provided for the decision but WOTC does promise new future promotional initiatives:

We remain focused on investing in promotional programs and incentives that drive long-term growth and repeat play in stores. You will continue to see strong in-store support through initiatives that reward player engagement, spotlight new releases, and help you activate your local audience through in-store experiences. We will also continue testing new event structures, support, and promotions to identify and expand your store’s experiences.

So, how does this announcement end a family tradition? Anyone following our adventures knows that we buy a box with every set. Well, almost every set as we put an end to that tradition with The Last Avatar given our lack of interest in the set.

We gather together at our gaming table and crack open the box. We then go around, one at a time, picking up a pack until the box is empty. The real fun then follows. We all together crack a pack and go through our cards. We reveal the Rare and Mythic pulls. We then repeat until we have gone through all the packs. Surrounded by the empty booster wrappers, the final part of the tradition is to give the Buy-a-Box promo card to the person who pulled the least Mythics. While most of these have little value, it was the consolation prize (and it did work out in a few cases!). Some even became favourites. I’m fond of Firesong and Sunspeaker (despite the fact that Noah has it). And Noah built a cats and dogs deck with Rin and Seri, Inseparable. And while we were not playing when Surgical Extraction was the promo, it might have been a nice card to end the opening tradition with.

It is rare for whatever reason that we end up with equal number of Mythics. There is typically one person who does really well while there is also someone disappointed with their pulls (the trial and tribulations of opening booster packs). Sliding the BaB promo over to that person was essentially with some light-hearted teasing.

With Lorwyn Eclipsed coming up next, the boys and I had already talked about resuming the tradition. We are still discussing the timing given that Noah is now out of the province for university but we are looking forward to the new set. Unfortunately, we’ll have to see if we can come up with an alternative tradition for the compensation prize.

Pioneer finally coming to MTG Arena

Wizards of the Coast this week announced what many had expected for some time now: Pioneer is coming to  Magic: The Gathering Arena later this week. On Saturday, May 10, the Explorer format will bow out and Pioneer will take its place with the introduction of 11 new cards.

We knew that, one day, we would retire Explorer and replace it with Pioneer, a change we would implement once we got all the relevant cards onto MTG Arena. We have closely watching Pioneer and believe that we have achieved this goal. Out of 411 distinct competitive Magic Online decklists played in March, Explorer was only missing seven cards found in those decklists.

Pioneer launched back in late 2019, about a year after MTG Arena launched in beta. Whereas the Modern format includes cards from Eighth Edition onwards, Pioneer limits itself to sets released since Return to Ravnica. Wizards launched Explorer in 2022 as a digital-only format that was very similar to Pioneer but lacked many of the key cards of the latter format. The gap narrowed gradually with new set releases, including the recent Pioneer Masters.

To be accurate, it should be noted that Arena’s Pioneer format does not include all Pioneer-standard cards – There are a number missing (about 2,000 in fact) but none of these appear in more competitive decks. According to WOTC, they did ask their Arena Championship players about any missing cards and were told by most that there were no “major misses.”

The new cards to be launched to turn Explorer into Pioneer are:

  • Battle at the Bridge
  • Borborygmos Enraged
  • Encroaching Wastes
  • Kazuul’s Toll Collector
  • Magmatic Insight
  • Nissa’s Defeat
  • Rakdos Charm
  • Roast
  • Sanctum of Ugin
  • Triton Shorestalker
  • Warping Wail

I’m all for this move. It eliminates a digital-only format and improves parity between digital and physical formats. While the absence of some 2,000 cards is bound to upset some deck brewers,

I don’t play a lot of Explorer on MTG Arena but have been steadily playing more and do have a ExplorerPioneer version of my Orzhov Cleric deck in Arena. There are about 40 Cleric cards in those cards still missing in Arena but I’m not sure that they would materially impact my deck.

Read more: Announcing Pioneer

Is May 10th marked on your calendars? Drop us a note if it is.

Transform Your B01 Standard Orzhov Cleric Deck with Tarkir: Dragonstorm Cards

Pre-release events for Tarkir: Dragonstorm start next Friday! That means that previews for the newest set are done and it is once again time to take a look a closer look at the set and see if my kindred Standard B01 Orzhov Cleric deck will transform into a first tier deck.

Last time round, Aetherdrift only brought two new Clerics to the table. Tarkir: Dragonstorm will easily outdo that, offering up six new Cleric cards for consideration. So let’s see what we have to work with. One, Severance Priest, is immediately out because of the Green pip pip in its mana costs. That leaves us with five to review.

Abzan Devotee is a common that could prove useful when it comes to mana fixing. For , we can add either a White pip or Black pip to the mana pool (you could tap for Green pip but it would not be not very useful in this deck).

Unrooted Ancestor is a card that I may try to get into the deck. The challenge is that the current deck is not built around sacrifice. Add Krumar Initiate to the mix and there is now a way to generate cheap Spirits that could power this card. It does require both cards and only generates one spirit per turn.

Maybe I should add Krumar Initiate to the deck and skip Unrooted Ancestor for now. I can use the Spirits for offence and defense instead of sacrificing them. I’ll start there and see if the card cranks out enough Spirits that I could then consider sacrificing some of them. Krumar Initiate also has a bit of synergy with Essence Channeler, giving it flying and vigilance as I lose life.

If you’ve followed this blog long enough, you know I like big creatures. Loxodon Battle Priest is not only one of those but it also can help me grow other Clerics into bigger ones. Is there anything better than a beefy Cleric swinging at your opponent? It is pricey though.

At first glance, Venerated Stormsinger looked like an automatic add. Then I re-read the card a bit more carefully. Sure it generates a 1/1 red Warrior each turn; but it’s only one per turn and it gets sacrificed at the next end step. So, that 1/1 will start to lose value as the game goes on and bigger threats emerge. The additional life trigger is not bad but still feels like less than it promises.

Time to see what I can cut to see if Krumar Initiate and Loxodon Battle Priest. My first choices are Metropolis Reformer and Infernal Vessel. That gives me four slots to work with. I think it will be a straight swap.

As far as non-creature spells, I will take a closer look and see what makes sense. Smile at Death caught my attention as I took a first glance through the list. It would let me return my Clerics to the battlefield given that I don’t have a lot of protection and they tend to die quickly. But two other cards caught my attention despite not going into this deck. Elspeth, Storm Slayer and Ugin, Eye of the Storms, definitely look like good fun. Ugin in particular could finally convince me to look at a colourless Commander deck. But that’s a topic for a future post.

As far as lands are concerned, nothing really jumps out. Many are focused on the three-colour combinations aligned to the Dragonstorm clan wedges. I may look at Dalkovan Encampment and Great Arashin City as they do give me an advantage over regular lands but at the cost of entering tapped. Not exactly a strong proposition!

So here is the deck that I will start to play with as soon as Tarkir: Dragonstorm cards are in my hands or on Arena!

Deck:

Deck:

  • 2 Go for the Throat (BRO) 102
  • 2 Anointed Peacekeeper (DMU) 2
  • 2 Fell (BLB) 95
  • 3 Evolved Sleeper (DMU) 93
  • 3 Shadow-Rite Priest (DMU) 106
  • 2 Loran’s Escape (BRO) 14
  • 3 Essence Channeler (BLB) 12
  • 2 Elas il-Kor, Sadistic Pilgrim (DMU) 198
  • 3 Phyrexian Missionary (DMU) 27
  • 3 Annex Sentry (ONE) 2
  • 3 Preacher of the Schism (LCI) 113
  • 2 Roaming Throne (LCI) 258
  • 2 Cut Down (DMU) 89
  • 2 Krumar Initiate (TDM) 84
  • 2 Loxodon Battle Priest (TDM) 15

Lands:

  • 2 Cavern of Souls (LCI) 269
  • 1 The Dross Pits (ONE) 251
  • 2 Fabled Passage (ELD) 244
  • 1 Forlorn Flats (OTJ) 258
  • 1 The Fair Basilica (ONE) 252
  • 2 Scoured Barrens (NEO) 274
  • 1 Valgavoth’s Lair (DSK) 271
  • 8 Plains (THB) 250
  • 6 Swamp (THB) 252

Sideboard

  • 2 Grand Abolisher (BIG) 2
  • 1 Skrelv, Defector Mite (ONE) 33
  • 1 Pest Control (BIG) 22
  • 2 Lay Down Arms (BRO) 11
  • 1 The Witch’s Vanity (WOE) 119
  • 1 Sanguine Evangelist (LCI) 34
  • 1 Zoraline, Cosmos Caller (BLB) 242
  • 1 Leyline Binding (DMU) 24
  • 2 Liliana of the Veil (DMU) 97
  • 2 Virtue of Persistence (WOE) 115
  • 1 Moonrise Cleric (BLB) 226