Lorwyn Eclipsed Commander (ECC) Set Guide
Magic's return to Lorwyn has been a long time coming, and Lorwyn Eclipsed Commander (ECC) is one of the products arriving alongside the main set. As the Commander preconstructed deck lineup tied to the 109th Magic expansion, ECC is a 176-card product designed for players who want to jump straight into the action on one of the game's most beloved planes.
I'll be upfront: details on this product are still limited at the time of writing. What follows is everything confirmed so far, with clear flags wherever information is still pending.
What is Lorwyn Eclipsed Commander?
Lorwyn Eclipsed is the 109th Magic: The Gathering expansion, codenamed "Wrestling" during development. It was originally slated for a Q4 2025 release but was moved to January 23, 2026 - making it the first major Magic set of the new year.
Lorwyn Eclipsed Commander (ECC) is the accompanying Commander preconstructed deck product, containing 176 cards. Like most modern Commander precons, ECC releases as a regular part of the set's product line, giving players a ready-to-play deck built around the themes and mechanics of the Lorwyn Eclipsed set.
Themes and mechanics
Details on ECC's specific mechanics are still to be announced. The source material lists tokens, emblems, and markers as part of the set's design space, but the specifics haven't been revealed yet.
What we do know is that Lorwyn as a plane has a rich mechanical history to draw from - tribal synergies, clash, and the day/night cycle introduced in the original Lorwyn block (2007-2008) are all part of the plane's identity. Whether Lorwyn Eclipsed revisits those mechanics or charts new territory is something we'll know closer to the January 2026 release.
Format check: Commander precon decks are legal in Commander out of the box. New cards printed in ECC will also be legal in any format that allows cards from the accompanying main set, once released.
Preconstructed decks
The number of Commander decks in the ECC lineup and their specific names, color identities, and commanders have not been announced yet. Modern set releases typically include between two and four Commander precon decks per set, each built around a distinct theme or color combination.
I'll update this section as spoiler season gets underway and Wizards of the Coast reveals the full lineup.
Lore and setting
Lorwyn is one of Magic's most distinctive planes - a perpetually sunlit pastoral world inhabited by tribes like Kithkin, Elves, Giants, Merfolk, Faeries, Boggarts, and Treefolk. It's a plane defined by its storybook aesthetic and its tribal tensions, and it has a particularly devoted fanbase.
Lore aside: The original Lorwyn block (2007) had a twist baked into its design: the plane would eventually shift into Shadowmoor, its dark mirror image plunged into perpetual twilight. The name "Lorwyn Eclipsed" strongly suggests the story picks up around that transformation - though whether we're seeing the eclipse itself, the aftermath, or something entirely new is still speculation on my part.
What we're still waiting on
Honestly, there's quite a bit still to come on ECC. Key unknowns include:
- Commander deck names and themes
- Confirmed commander cards for each deck
- Full card list and new cards exclusive to the precons
- Token, emblem, and marker specifics
- Pricing and packaging details
Spoiler season for a January 2026 set will likely begin in late 2025. Keep an eye on the official Magic website and community spoiler aggregators for the full picture as it develops.
Set legacy
It's too early to speak to ECC's legacy - the set hasn't released yet. What I can say is that Lorwyn Commander products have serious potential. The plane's tribal identity maps beautifully onto Commander's multiplayer format, where tribal synergies tend to snowball in satisfying ways.
If Lorwyn Eclipsed leans into what made the original plane special - rich creature-type synergies, a layered aesthetic, and that sense of a world with real history - then ECC could be one of the more exciting Commander precon lineups in recent memory. But I'll reserve judgment until we see the cards. 😄















