Legendary Cube Prize Pack (PZ1): Set Guide
The Legendary Cube Prize Pack (set code PZ1) is a Magic: The Gathering prize set released exclusively on Magic Online (MTGO). It contains 149 cards and serves as the reward pack for players who compete in the Legendary Cube queue - a curated, high-powered limited experience built around legendary permanents and the themes that surround them.
Unlike a traditional booster set you'd crack at your local game store, PZ1 isn't available for purchase. You earn it. That distinction shapes everything about how it's perceived and collected.
What is Legendary Cube Prize Pack?
Prize packs in the MTGO ecosystem work a little differently from retail products. When Wizards of the Coast runs a Cube event on Magic Online, players who finish with enough wins receive prize packs instead of - or in addition to - regular set boosters. The Legendary Cube Prize Pack is specifically tied to the Legendary Cube, a constructed-by-Wizards singleton environment stocked with some of the most powerful legendary cards in the game's history.
The 149-card set is effectively a curated selection of reprints - cards chosen to complement the Legendary Cube's themes and give prize winners something meaningful to open. Because the cards come from across Magic's history, the pool has a greatest-hits feel: you're as likely to pull something from an old Expert-level expansion as from a more recent set.
Format check: PZ1 cards are legal only in formats where the individual cards are already legal. The prize pack itself doesn't grant any new format legality - a card that's Legacy-legal is still Legacy-legal, and one that's only Vintage-legal stays there.
Themes and the Legendary Cube connection
The Legendary Cube that PZ1 supports is built around a central premise: legendary permanents matter. That means the prize pack leans into the same space - commanders, planeswalkers, iconic legendary creatures, and the supporting spells that make those pieces work.
Because the cube itself is a singleton environment running some of the most powerful cards in the game, the prize pack cards tend to skew toward high-impact, multi-format staples rather than bulk commons. That's part of what makes prize pack openings feel rewarding - the floor is higher than a typical booster.
Collecting and obtaining PZ1 cards
Since PZ1 packs aren't sold in the MTGO store, the primary ways to obtain cards from the set are:
- Winning them through Legendary Cube event prizes
- Trading on the MTGO marketplace, where other players who've won packs may sell or trade individual cards
- The MTGO bots, which often stock PZ1 singles pulled from prize winners
This scarcity model means some PZ1 printings can hold meaningful ticket value on MTGO even when the same card exists in other sets, simply because supply is limited to however many prize packs get opened during a given event run.
Set legacy
The Legendary Cube Prize Pack occupies a specific and somewhat niche corner of Magic history - it's a product that most paper players will never interact with directly, since it exists solely in the Magic Online ecosystem. But within that ecosystem, it represents Wizards' approach to making prize support feel meaningful rather than throwaway.
Rather than handing out packs of the current Standard set (which may or may not be relevant to a cube player's interests), the prize pack was tailored to the event. Players drafting a legendary-matters cube get prize cards that fit that world. It's a small design choice, but it shows a thoughtfulness about what prize support is actually for.
I think that philosophy - matching the reward to the experience - is genuinely underrated as a piece of game design, even if PZ1 itself never gets discussed in the same breath as iconic sets. ✨















