Core Set 2020 (M20): Set Guide & Card Overview
Core sets have a reputation for being the quiet workhorses of Magic's release calendar - not as flashy as a big narrative set, but quietly essential. Core Set 2020 (set code: M20) is the nineteenth Magic core set, released on July 12, 2019. It contains 345 cards and sits in that familiar core set sweet spot: accessible enough for newer players picking up the game, but with enough power and depth to matter in constructed formats.
If you're diving into M20 for the first time - whether to draft, brew, or just understand what the set is - this guide has you covered.
What is Core Set 2020?
Core Set 2020 is the nineteenth core set in Magic's history and the third under the modern core set revival that began with Core Set 2019 (M19). It was released on July 12, 2019, and was legal in Standard until fall 2020 when it rotated out alongside the other sets from its era.
At 345 cards, it follows the blueprint that defines core sets: a curated mix of reprints and new cards, designed to be a clean entry point for new players while offering something relevant for veterans. Core sets don't push the envelope mechanically the way a premier set might, but they do introduce key reprints and the occasional card that quietly shapes formats for years.
Alongside the main set, M20 released a range of supplementary products including Planeswalker Decks, a Deck Builder's Toolkit, a Spellslinger Starter Kit, and Welcome Decks - all aimed at getting newer players into the game with ready-to-play product.
Themes and mechanics
Core Set 2020 keeps its mechanics approachable by design, which is the philosophy core sets are built around. Rather than introducing a sprawling system of new keywords, M20 leans on clean, well-understood mechanics and supplements them with a handful of new or returning ideas.
Because the source material available for this set is limited, I'd recommend checking resources like Scryfall or the official Magic site for the full mechanical breakdown - but the set's identity as an accessible, fundamentals-first release is consistent with every modern core set that preceded and followed it.
Limited and Draft
Draft is traditionally where core sets shine for the player who just wants to sit down and play Magic without the overhead of a complex new keyword system. M20's 345-card set gives Draft plenty of room to breathe, with enough variety across all five colors to support multiple archetypes.
Core set Draft formats tend to run at a slightly slower pace than premier set Drafts, which rewards players who prioritise card advantage and stable mana over explosive turn-three plans. If you're newer to Draft, core sets are genuinely one of the best places to learn the fundamentals - the games tend to go long enough that you can see your mistakes and understand why they happened.
Format check: M20 is no longer available in Best-of-One or Best-of-Three Draft on MTG Arena in its standard rotation, but it may appear in special events or curated formats.
Notable cards and impact
Core Set 2020 produced several cards that made real waves in constructed formats during its Standard and beyond-Standard life. Core sets are often underestimated at first glance - the lack of a splashy narrative hook can make them feel like filler - but M20 earned its place in the conversation.
The set's constructed impact was felt across Standard and in some eternal formats, with a number of cards finding homes in competitive decks during the 2019-2020 Standard season.
Note: The source material available for this article doesn't list specific notable cards by name, so I'm not going to invent card attributions here. For a full list of M20's constructed staples, Scryfall's M20 page with sorting by price or format legality is the fastest way to see what made an impact.
Lore and setting
Core sets have historically taken a different approach to story than premier sets - rather than following a single narrative arc across the plane of the set, they tend to spotlight individual Planeswalkers and offer slices of lore from across the Multiverse. Core Set 2020 follows this pattern.
The source material for this article doesn't provide specific story or plane details for M20, so I won't speculate. What I can say is that core sets of this era used the Planeswalker Decks as mini-story vehicles, each one paired with a specific Planeswalker character and their corner of the Multiverse - a nice way to introduce new players to the breadth of Magic's lore without requiring thirty years of reading.
Set legacy
Core Set 2020 is remembered as a solid, functional core set that did exactly what core sets are supposed to do. It didn't redefine the game, but it kept Standard healthy, gave Draft players a clean and learnable format, and delivered some cards that held genuine constructed weight during their time in rotation.
In the broader context of Magic's release schedule, M20 sits between War of the Spark (May 2019) and Throne of Eldraine (October 2019) - arguably one of the most dramatic stretches in recent Magic history, with WAR shaking up every format and Eldraine introducing mechanics that would eventually land on the banlist. Against that backdrop, M20 was a breath of familiar air: steady, approachable, and quietly useful.
The set also marks a meaningful moment in core set history as the nineteenth core set - almost at the midpoint of the modern revival before Core Set 2021 (M21) followed in July 2020 and the series continued its annual cadence.
For players who came into the game around this period, M20 is probably where some of their earliest drafted games happened, and that counts for something. Core sets don't always get the love they deserve, but they're the handshake Magic extends to every new player who sits down at the table for the first time. ✨















