Commander 2021: The Complete Set Guide
Released on April 23, 2021 alongside Strixhaven: School of Mages, Commander 2021 (set code: C21) is one of the most thematically cohesive Commander releases Wizards of the Coast has ever put out. Rather than standing apart from a main set, it was marketed as an integral part of the Strixhaven product line - five preconstructed Commander decks, each built around one of Strixhaven's five colleges. Officially styled as Commander (2021 Edition), you'll also hear it called Strixhaven Commander.
What is Commander 2021?
Commander 2021 is part of the long-running Commander preconstructed series, which began with the original Commander set back in 2011 and has released annually (or near-annually) ever since. C21 contains 409 cards spread across five 100-card decks, with a mix of reprints and cards new to Magic entirely.
What made C21 notable in the context of the series is how tightly it was woven into the Strixhaven release. Each deck represents one of the five colleges of Strixhaven - the magical university at the heart of that set's story - and the deck names match the college names directly. If you were picking up Strixhaven boosters and wanted to dive deeper into a particular college's identity, there was a Commander deck waiting for you.
Format check: All cards legal in Commander from these decks follow the normal Commander legality rules. Cards printed for the first time in C21 are legal in Commander (and Vintage/Legacy by default), but not in Standard, Pioneer, or Modern unless they were also printed in a legal set for those formats.
The five decks
Each of the five Commander 2021 decks is named after its corresponding Strixhaven college:
| Deck Name | College | Colours | |---|---|---| | Silverquill Statement | Silverquill | White/Black ({W}{B}) | | Prismari Performance | Prismari | Blue/Red ({U}{R}) | | Witherbloom Witchcraft | Witherbloom | Black/Green ({B}{G}) | | Lorehold Legacies | Lorehold | Red/White ({R}{W}) | | Quantum Quandrix | Quantum Quandrix | Green/Blue ({G}{U}) |
Each deck is built around the two-colour identity of its college, and each college itself is defined by a philosophical tension - for example, Silverquill is the college of rhetoric and language, sitting at the crossroads of eloquence and intimidation, expressed mechanically through White and Black.
Themes and mechanics
Because C21 is tied so closely to Strixhaven's mechanical identity, the decks lean into the themes that set introduced rather than inventing a parallel mechanical world.
Magecraft
One of Strixhaven's signature mechanics, magecraft rewards you whenever you cast or copy an Instant or Sorcery spell. It's a triggered ability that appears on creatures and other permanents, and it turns your spells-matter gameplan into a passive engine - every Instant or Sorcery you fire off is also quietly ticking up magecraft triggers across your board.
Magecraft fits Commander particularly well. The format's longer games and higher starting life totals mean you have time to build a board full of magecraft creatures before your spells really start multiplying in impact. The Prismari Performance and Quantum Quandrix decks in particular lean into this.
Tokens and counters
Several decks lean into token generation and +1/+1 counter strategies - mechanical territories that have always been strong in Commander's multiplayer environment. Witherbloom Witchcraft plays in the life gain/drain space common to Black/Green, while Quantum Quandrix doubles down on creature tokens and counters in a very literal sense.
Flashback and past-matters
Lorehold Legacies draws on the college's archaeological, history-obsessed flavour to play with graveyard recursion and the idea of bringing the past back to bear on the present. Mechanically, this expresses itself through cards that reward you for interacting with your graveyard or returning things from it.
Lore and setting
Strixhaven: School of Mages takes place on Arcavios, a plane dominated by a legendary magical university of the same name. The school is divided into five colleges, each founded by a pair of ancient dragon mages called the Founder Dragons:
- Silverquill - founded by Shadrix Silverquill, college of words and expression
- Prismari - founded by Galazeth Prismari, college of art and elemental magic
- Witherbloom - founded by Beledros Witherbloom, college of life, death, and nature magic
- Lorehold - founded by Velomachus Lorehold, college of history and archaeology
- Quandrix - founded by Tanazir Quandrix, college of mathematics and nature
Each Commander deck puts you in the role of a mage from that college, and the decks' flavour text, card names, and mechanical identity all reinforce the sense of belonging to a particular academic tradition. It's one of the more immersive Commander product tie-ins Wizards has done, in my opinion - it genuinely feels like five different schools of thought rather than five colour pairs with a coat of paint on top.
Lore aside: The Founder Dragons aren't just flavour - several of them appear as legendary creatures in the Strixhaven main set and the Commander decks, and function as commander options in their own right.
Set legacy
Commander 2021 is remembered as a strong entry in the preconstructed series, largely because the Strixhaven tie-in gave each deck a coherent identity that went deeper than colour pair. When a deck's theme comes from a fully realised in-universe institution with its own history and philosophy, it shows in the card selection.
The decision to release Commander decks on the same day as the main set - and to market them as part of it rather than a companion product - was also a sign of things to come. This model of tightly pairing Commander precons with their parent set became standard practice going forward, reflecting how central Commander had become to Magic's product strategy by 2021.
C21 sits in a lineage that runs from the original Commander (2011) through Commander 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020 - each release refining what a preconstructed Commander deck can be. If you're interested in how the series evolved, that's a rewarding thread to follow through Magic's recent history.















