Magic 2015 (M15): Set Guide & Card List
What is Magic 2015?
Magic 2015 - set code M15 - is the 16th Magic core set, released on July 18, 2014. Like all core sets of its era, it serves as an accessible entry point into Magic: The Gathering while also reprinting powerful staples alongside a selection of new cards. M15 contains 284 cards spread across all five colours, plus multicolour, artifact, and land slots.
Core sets at this point in Magic's history occupied a specific design space: no complicated new themes, familiar mechanics kept front and centre, and a roster of reprints that helped keep key cards available in Standard. M15 followed that template, though it came with a few notable wrinkles worth talking about.
Format check: M15 was legal in Standard from its release in July 2014 until it rotated out in October 2015, alongside Theros (THS), Born of the Gods (BNG), and Journey into Nyx (JOU).
Themes and mechanics
Being a core set, M15 leaned on mechanics that were already part of Magic's vocabulary rather than introducing sweeping new systems. The mechanical identity of the set is built around clear, readable effects - creatures that do obvious things, removal that works the way you expect, and enough keyword soup to give Limited games texture without overwhelming newer players.
Returning mechanics in M15 include familiar staples of core set design: flying, trample, lifelink, deathtouch, haste, and first strike all appear on creatures throughout the set. These evergreen keywords give the set a grounded, approachable feel.
One genuinely notable addition M15 brought to the table was a visual and functional change to the card frame rather than a new keyword - but in terms of gameplay mechanics, the set kept things deliberately accessible.
Limited and Draft
M15 Draft has the characteristic feel of core set Limited: games are relatively straightforward, creature combat matters enormously, and the format rewards players who understand how to build a clean, coherent mana curve more than those chasing elaborate synergies.
Because core sets lack the dense mechanical themes of expansion sets - no named Draft archetypes tied to specific two-colour guild or clan identities - M15 Draft is in many ways a pure fundamentals format. You're asking yourself the same questions on every pick: does this creature win combat? Does this removal spell answer the threats I'm likely to face? Can I actually cast this on curve?
For newer players, this makes M15 a genuinely instructive format to look back on. For experienced players drafting at the time, it could feel a little flat compared to the complexity of Theros block. That tension - accessible versus deep - is something core sets have always navigated.
Lore and setting
Core sets of this era didn't carry a dedicated narrative the way expansion blocks did. M15 doesn't take place on a specific plane or advance a serialised story. Instead, it draws on characters and imagery from across the Multiverse, with Planeswalkers featured on cards representing familiar faces from Magic's wider cast.
The set's identity is more mechanical and product-focused than lore-driven - which is true of most core sets from this period. If you're looking for deep worldbuilding, the Theros block that M15 sat alongside in Standard is where the story action was in 2014.
Set legacy
M15 holds a quiet but genuine place in Magic history for a reason that has nothing to do with any individual card: it introduced the updated card frame that Magic still uses today. The 2014 frame revision - slightly larger text boxes, repositioned collector information, a new font - was a significant visual overhaul, and M15 was the first set to carry it. Every card you pick up now descends from that design decision.
Beyond the frame, M15 is remembered as a solid if unspectacular core set. It did its job: kept Standard healthy, gave newer players an on-ramp, and reprinted enough useful cards to matter for the formats of the time. In an era when Wizards of the Coast was still releasing annual core sets, M15 was a dependable entry in a well-established tradition - one that ended just a year later when core sets were discontinued after Magic Origins (ORI) in 2015, before eventually returning with Core Set 2019 in 2018.
For players who were getting into Magic in the summer of 2014, M15 was often the set. That's not nothing. Core sets have always done quiet, important work at the edges of Magic's history, and M15 is a good example of that.











