Outlaws of Thunder Junction Commander (OTC) — Set Guide
Released on April 19, 2024, Outlaws of Thunder Junction Commander is the suite of four preconstructed Commander decks that accompanied the main Outlaws of Thunder Junction set. If you've ever wanted to ride into a Magic heist with a posse at your back, this is the product line built for exactly that fantasy.
The set code is OTC, and the product contains 342 cards spread across all four decks - a mix of reprints and new cards designed specifically for Commander.
The four decks at a glance
Each deck leans into the western outlaw flavour of Thunder Junction in its own way. Here's the quick overview:
| Deck name | Colours | Commander | |---|---|---| | Desert Bloom | {W}{R}{G} | Yuma, Proud Protector | | Quick Draw | {U}{R} | Stella Lee, Wild Card | | Most Wanted | {W}{B}{R} | Olivia, Opulent Outlaw | | Grand Larceny | {U}{B}{G} | Gonti, Canny Acquisitor |
Four decks, four different takes on what it means to be an outlaw - from the scrappy spellslinger energy of Quick Draw to the scheming theft-based gameplay of Grand Larceny.
Themes and mechanical identity
Thunder Junction's western setting gave the design team a rich sandbox to play with, and each deck translates a different outlaw archetype into Commander mechanics.
Desert Bloom - {W}{R}{G}
Yuma, Proud Protector leads a deck built around the desert subtype and cycling, turning the act of discarding lands into a resource engine. The Naya colour combination gives it access to big creatures, ramp, and go-wide token strategies - think less "outlaw" and more "frontier settler who will absolutely fight you if you cross them."
Quick Draw - {U}{R}
Stella Lee, Wild Card helms the Izzet spellslinger deck, which is probably the most on-brand Commander archetype for a set named after gunslingers. Casting instants and sorceries repeatedly, generating value from each spell, and then doing it all again - this is the deck for players who want to feel like the fastest draw in the west.
Most Wanted - {W}{B}{R}
Olivia, Opulent Outlaw leads the Mardu deck, which leans into the crime and outlaw-matters themes that are central to Thunder Junction's mechanical identity. Expect aggressive gameplay with payoffs for committing crimes and mustering a crew of outlaws.
Grand Larceny - {U}{B}{G}
Gonti, Canny Acquisitor commands the Sultai deck built around stealing your opponents' cards and using their own resources against them. If any deck captures the spirit of a heist, it's this one - every spell your opponents cast is potentially yours to exploit.
Lore and setting
Thunder Junction is a plane with a hard western aesthetic - dusty desert towns, train heists, and a cast of returning Planeswalker villains assembled for one big score. The Commander decks sit inside that same world, with commanders and card art that reinforce the setting's flavour.
Lore aside: Olivia Voldaren, who leads Most Wanted, is a long-running Magic character making her Thunder Junction debut as a commander of this particular crew. Gonti similarly brings a history of scheming and acquisition that fits the Grand Larceny concept almost too perfectly.
The desert plane itself - with its emphasis on the desert land subtype, survival under harsh conditions, and the tension between ambitious newcomers and those who know the land - runs through all four decks thematically, even when the mechanics diverge.
Release and product context
These four decks released simultaneously with the main Outlaws of Thunder Junction set on April 19, 2024, following the standard model Wizards of the Coast has used for Commander precons since they became a regular part of new set releases.
OTC sits alongside the main set (OTJ), the Breaking News bonus sheet, and The Big Score special series as part of the broader Thunder Junction product release. The Commander decks are their own standalone product - you don't need the main set to play them.
Format check: These decks are designed for Commander (also called EDH). The cards printed for the first time in OTC are legal in Commander, Legacy, and Vintage, but not in Standard, Pioneer, or Modern unless they were also printed elsewhere in a legal-for-those-formats set.
Set legacy
It's still early days for OTC in the long arc of Magic history - the set released in 2024, and Commander precon evaluations tend to settle over months as players crack them open, upgrade them, and see which commanders build devoted followings in the broader community.
What I can say is that the four-deck model continues to give Commander players meaningful choices at the point of purchase. Each OTC deck targets a genuinely different play style, which is exactly what a good precon lineup should do. Whether Stella Lee's spellslinging or Gonti's theft-based gameplay becomes a beloved build in your local playgroup probably depends more on your table than on any tier list I could write.















