Chronicles Foreign Black Border (BCHR): Set Guide
Some sets exist to introduce new mechanics. Chronicles Foreign Black Border exists because reprints matter - and because a black border makes everything feel a little more serious.
BCHR is, in a very literal sense, a foreign black-bordered version of Chronicles: the 1995 reprint set that collected cards from four older sets - Arabian Nights, Antiquities, Legends, and The Dark - and put them in front of players who had missed out the first time. The Foreign Black Border version is exactly what the name promises: black-bordered printings of those 124 cards, originally released for non-English markets.
What is Chronicles Foreign Black Border?
Chronicles Foreign Black Border (set code: BCHR) is a 124-card Magic: The Gathering set. It is the foreign black-bordered counterpart to Chronicles, the 1995 reprint set. While the standard English Chronicles release used white borders - as was Wizards of the Coast's convention for reprints at the time - non-English editions were printed with the traditional black border. Collectors and players who prize black borders on their cards have long sought out these foreign language printings as a result.
The 124 cards in BCHR are reprints drawn from the Legends and The Dark blocks, among other early sets, and include some of Magic's most iconic early cards. Many of them were, at the time of Chronicles' release, difficult or expensive to obtain in their original printings.
Format check: Because BCHR cards are reprints of older cards, their format legality depends entirely on the individual card, not the set itself. Always check the specific card's legality in your format of choice.
Themes and mechanics
BCHR doesn't introduce any mechanics of its own - it's a reprint set, so it inherits the mechanical identity of the sets it draws from. What that means in practice is a broad cross-section of early Magic design: Elder Dragons with cumulative upkeep costs, banding, landwalk, and a general sense of ambitious-but-sometimes-unwieldy card design that characterises Magic's earliest years.
Legends cards are a major part of the set's identity. Chromium Rhuell - one of the five Elder Dragons from Legends - appears here, and his presence anchors the set's most flavourful corner. The Elder Dragons were the cards that gave the Commander format its original name (Elder Dragon Highlander), and seeing them in black-bordered foreign printings carries a certain weight for anyone who knows that history.
Lore aside: Chromium Rhuell is one of the most widely-appearing Elder Dragons in Magic's story. He shows up in the Ice Age comic series, the Dakkon Blackblade comics, and later in Kate Elliott's "Chronicle of Bolas" story arc for Core Set 2019 - a remarkable breadth of appearances for a card that dates back to Legends.
Notable cards and impact
The headline name in BCHR is almost certainly Chromium Rhuell, one of the five legendary Elder Dragons from Legends. In his original printing, Chromium was a 7/7 flying creature with banding and rampage - a genuinely imposing card for the era, and one whose lore footprint has only grown over the decades.
The Dakkon Blackblade comics, which were distributed with early Chronicles cards, included Dakkon Blackblade as an insert card - a neat piece of Magic publishing history that ties the comics directly to the set's physical cards. The first issue of the Dakkon Blackblade comic series shipped with a copy of Dakkon Blackblade from Chronicles, making those issues simultaneously a story object and a card-delivery mechanism.
Beyond individual cards, the broader significance of BCHR is its status as a collector's object. Black-bordered foreign Chronicles cards occupy a specific niche: they're not original Legends or The Dark printings, but they carry the black border that white-bordered Chronicles copies lack, and they exist in languages that many English-speaking collectors don't often seek out - which can make them surprisingly findable, or surprisingly scarce, depending on the language and card.
Lore and setting
The cards in BCHR are set primarily on Dominaria, Magic's central plane and the home of the vast majority of early Magic storytelling. The Legends set in particular is rooted in a period of Dominarian history defined by powerful city-states, warring factions, and the looming presence of elder beings - dragons, demons, and legendary figures whose deeds shaped the plane for millennia.
The continent of Corondor on Dominaria features heavily in the associated comic material. The Dakkon Blackblade comic series - whose first issue came packaged with a Chronicles card - opens in a Corondor defined by draconian city-states and primitive clans, a world where legends are made because the need for them is desperate. It's a wonderfully bleak setup, and it gives cards like Dakkon Blackblade a narrative context that the card text alone can't quite convey.
Chromium Rhuell's lore is extensive by early Magic standards. He appears in the Ice Age comics alongside Freyalise, Lim-Dûl, and Leshrac, and later turns up in the Dakkon Blackblade series before making a full narrative return in Kate Elliott's 2018 "Chronicle of Bolas" stories - set on both Dominaria and Tarkir - where the Elder Dragons' ancient history is explored through the eyes of Yasova Dragonclaw's granddaughters.
Set legacy
Chronicles as a whole is a genuinely significant moment in Magic history - and not entirely for happy reasons. The set's release in 1995 caused real controversy among the player base, because reprinting rare cards reduced their secondary market value and upset collectors who had paid premium prices for original printings. The backlash contributed directly to Wizards of the Coast developing the Reserved List in 1996: a formal commitment not to reprint certain cards, which remains in effect (and remains controversial) to this day.
Chronicles Foreign Black Border sits at the edge of that story. As the non-English black-bordered version, it was printed for markets where the white-border convention was less established, and it didn't carry quite the same cultural weight as the English release. For collectors, though, the black border is the whole point - these are the versions that look like "real" Magic cards in the parlance of early Magic collecting culture, and they've retained a dedicated following among players who care about border colour on their older cards.
In my experience, BCHR is the kind of set that comes up in conversations about collecting and Magic history more than it comes up in conversations about deck-building. That's not a criticism - it's a reflection of what the set actually is: a fascinating artefact of a very specific moment in Magic's early years, when the game was still figuring out what reprints meant, what collectors deserved, and how to balance accessibility with the interests of its most invested players.















