Magic Online Theme Decks (TD0): Set Guide
Some sets exist to shake up a format. Some introduce mechanics that ripple through Magic for decades. Magic Online Theme Decks - set code TD0 - exists in a quieter corner of Magic history: a short-lived attempt to bring Legacy-competitive preconstructed decks to Magic Online players, packaged with event tickets and ready to play straight away.
It launched. It released exactly two decks. Then it stopped.
That's the whole story, more or less - but it's a genuinely interesting footnote in MTGO history, and if you're here trying to understand what TD0 actually is, you've come to the right place.
What is Magic Online Theme Decks?
The Magic Online Theme Decks series - officially called the Magic Online Deck Series - was a line of non-Standard, Legacy-competitive preconstructed theme decks released exclusively on Magic Online by Wizards of the Coast. Each package contained a 60-card main deck, a 15-card sideboard, and two event tickets, priced at $29.99.
The first (and only) two decks in the series, Boltslinger and Exiler, were released on November 8, 2010. They shared a set code and set symbol with the Commander Theme Decks of the same era.
The series was never continued beyond that initial release.
Format check: These decks were designed around Legacy legality, not Standard or any other rotating format. If you're looking at the individual cards from a format-legality perspective, check each card individually on Scryfall - Legacy has its own banlist, and card legality varies.
A series that launched and immediately ended
The concept behind the Magic Online Deck Series was appealing on paper. Legacy is an expensive format - both in paper and, historically, on MTGO - and preconstructed entry points at a fixed price make a lot of sense as a way to lower that barrier. Bundling event tickets alongside a ready-to-play 75-card package gave players an immediate path from purchase to game.
But the series stopped after two decks, with no official explanation from Wizards of the Coast about why it wasn't continued. In that sense, TD0 is less a "set" in the traditional Magic sense and more a product line that was quietly shelved.
I think that's genuinely a shame - the idea of affordable, competitive-format entry points for digital play is a good one. Whether the execution, the price point, the timing, or something else didn't land, we don't have much to go on.
The two decks
Only two products carry the TD0 set code:
- Boltslinger - a red-focused, aggressive deck built around burn spells and fast creatures, as the name suggests
- Exiler - the name implies a removal-heavy or exile-based strategy
Both decks were built to be Legacy-competitive out of the box, which distinguished them from the introductory-level theme decks Wizards regularly packaged with Standard-legal sets.
A note on card counts: The TD0 set is listed as containing 197 cards across both products combined, reflecting the full card pools of the two 75-card decks (main deck plus sideboard) with some overlap in the count methodology.
How TD0 relates to other MTGO-exclusive products
Magic Online has a long history of products that exist only in digital form - from the Masters Edition sets that brought older cards into the MTGO ecosystem, to the Mirage block theme decks designed specifically for MTGO because those expansions predated physical theme decks entirely.
TD0 fits into that tradition of MTGO-native products, though its Legacy focus and competitive intent made it a different beast from the introductory precons typically associated with theme deck releases. Sharing a set symbol with the Commander Theme Decks of the same period is a small quirk that sometimes causes confusion when browsing set codes.
Set legacy
Honestly, TD0 doesn't have much of a competitive legacy - the series ended before it could build one. What it represents is more interesting than what it achieved: an early attempt to make competitive Magic Online formats more accessible through a curated, ready-to-play product at a fixed price point.
The broader question of how to make Legacy and other non-rotating formats accessible to new players online is one that Wizards has revisited in various forms over the years. TD0 was an early, ultimately short-lived answer to that question.
For collectors and set completionists on MTGO, TD0 is a minor curiosity - a set code attached to two decks that came and went in November 2010, leaving just a small footprint in Magic Online's long history.




