Edge of Eternities (EOE): The Complete Set Guide
Magic has visited gothic horror worlds, ancient Egyptian planes, and cyberpunk cityscapes - but Edge of Eternities takes the game somewhere genuinely new: outside the Multiverse itself. Released on August 1, 2025, EOE is Magic's 106th expansion and the set that introduces The Edge, a science-fantasy setting that sits at the border of everything we know about the game's cosmology.
With 399 cards, this is a full-sized expansion, and it's one with a lot to explore.
What is Edge of Eternities?
Edge of Eternities (EOE) is a standalone Magic: The Gathering expansion, the 106th in the game's history. It released on August 1, 2025.
What makes EOE immediately distinctive is its setting. Rather than taking place on one of the Multiverse's many planes - the worlds that Planeswalkers typically travel between - the set is set on The Edge: a science-fantasy region that exists outside the known Multiverse, bordering the Blind Eternities. If you're familiar with Magic's cosmology, the Blind Eternities is the chaotic non-space between planes that only Planeswalkers can survive crossing. The Edge sits right up against that void, which makes it unlike anywhere Magic has taken us before.
In terms of raw size, EOE's 399-card set puts it among Magic's larger releases, with plenty of room for deep mechanical themes and a full Limited environment.
Themes and mechanics
Edge of Eternities is built around a science-fantasy identity - think the aesthetics and wonder of deep-space sci-fi filtered through Magic's card-based ruleset. The Edge as a setting, sitting at the boundary of the Multiverse and the Blind Eternities, lends itself naturally to themes of the unknown, cosmic scale, and the liminal space between existence and void.
Format check: Specific new and returning mechanics for EOE haven't all been detailed in available pre-release documentation yet. As the set releases on August 1, 2025, full mechanical breakdowns will be updated here.
Limited and Draft
With 399 cards, Edge of Eternities has the card density to support a rich Draft and Sealed environment. The science-fantasy setting and the thematic space of "borders and boundaries" typically suggests mechanics that reward building toward a threshold or crossing into a new state - but we'll need to play the format to say anything concrete about its speed and archetypes.
I'd recommend watching early draft data closely after release on August 1, 2025, as the format's speed and dominant archetypes will become clear quickly once players get their hands on packs.
Lore and setting
The Edge
The central worldbuilding hook of Edge of Eternities is The Edge itself - a region of the Magic universe that has never been explored before in any set. It occupies the space at the very boundary of the Multiverse, pressing up against the Blind Eternities.
The Blind Eternities, for context, is the roiling chaotic medium through which Planeswalkers travel. It's fundamentally hostile to existence - most beings who enter it without a Planeswalker's spark are destroyed. The Edge sitting alongside that void, rather than within it, raises fascinating questions: what kind of life, civilisation, or power structure could survive at the rim of everything?
The science-fantasy framing suggests a setting that blends the cosmic and the technological - far removed from the high fantasy of planes like Dominaria or the gothic horror of Innistrad. This is Magic at its most ambitious in terms of setting design, at least conceptually.
Lore aside: Magic's cosmology has always treated the Blind Eternities as a background threat - the thing Planeswalkers navigate through but don't study. A set that places its entire story at the edge of that space is a significant lore expansion for the game's universe.
Set legacy
It's early days - Edge of Eternities only releases on August 1, 2025 - so any assessment of its legacy is necessarily a snapshot rather than a verdict. What we can say is that the setting ambition is real. Introducing an entirely new region of Magic's cosmology, one that recontextualises the Blind Eternities and the shape of the Multiverse, is the kind of worldbuilding swing that tends to echo through the game's lore for years.
Whether EOE's mechanical identity and card designs match that setting ambition is something we'll find out together at and after release. ✨














