Aetherdrift (DFT): Complete Set Guide
Racing across the planes of Magic's Multiverse isn't something you see every day. Aetherdrift is Magic: The Gathering's 103rd expansion, released on February 14, 2025, and it does exactly that - taking a multiplanar twist on the racing genre in a way no set before it has tried. With 553 cards and the set code DFT, it's one of the larger releases in recent memory.
What is Aetherdrift?
Aetherdrift is Magic's 103rd expansion, released on February 14, 2025. The set's central conceit is a multiplanar racing event - think competitors and factions from across the Multiverse converging to race, compete, and clash in ways that blend flavor and mechanics more tightly than usual.
At 553 cards, the set is a substantial release, giving Limited players a deep pool to explore and Constructed players plenty of new tools to consider.
Lore aside: The "Aether" in the set name isn't just cosmetic. Aether has been a recurring force in Magic's worldbuilding, most prominently on Kaladesh, where it flows through the air as a literal energy source. Aetherdrift's multiplanar framing pulls that concept into a broader, cross-plane context.
Themes and mechanics
The racing genre isn't one Magic has leaned into often, and Aetherdrift builds its mechanical identity around that theme. The set is described as a "multiplanar twist" on racing, which suggests mechanics tied to speed, competition, momentum, and the chaos of a multi-faction event.
Because the set draws competitors from across the Multiverse, you can expect a wide range of creature types, planar aesthetics, and faction identities colliding in one place - a structural approach Magic has used before in crossover-style sets, but here filtered through the specific drama of a race.
Format check: Aetherdrift is a Standard-legal set as of its February 2025 release. Check the current rotation schedule on the official Magic website for the most up-to-date legality information, as Standard rotates annually.
Lore and setting
Aetherdrift's story is built around a multiplanar racing event - a competition that pulls together factions, creatures, and characters from different planes of the Multiverse. The "Aether" framing ties the set thematically to the energy that has appeared across Magic's history, from Kaladesh's aether-powered inventions to the broader metaphysical concept of aether as the medium between planes.
The racing genre gives the set's story a tournament-arc structure: there are competitors, there are stakes, and there's presumably chaos when beings from wildly different planes try to outrun each other.
I don't want to speculate beyond what's confirmed, so for the full story details and chapter-by-chapter breakdown, the official Magic Story articles on the Wizards of the Coast website are the place to go.
Set legacy
Aetherdrift is a genuinely novel concept for a Magic set. A multiplanar racing event is a framing device the game hasn't used before, and the 553-card set size gives it real weight in both Limited and Constructed environments.
How it will be remembered long-term depends on the cards it contributes to competitive formats and how well its mechanics hold up in Draft and Sealed. As a February 2025 release, it's still early days - the set's full legacy will take time to settle as the meta develops around it.
What I can say is that a set willing to do something this structurally different - building a whole expansion around a multiplanar race - is exactly the kind of creative ambition that keeps Magic's card design interesting after thirty years. ✨








