Pioneer Masters (PIO): The Complete Set Guide
For years, Arena players who wanted to play Pioneer had to settle for Explorer - a format that tried its best but always had a nagging asterisk attached to it. Pioneer Masters is the card set that finally ripped that asterisk off.
Released on Magic: The Gathering Arena on December 10, 2024, Pioneer Masters is a 398-card digital-only reprint set that draws from the entire Pioneer card pool. It isn't a traditional expansion with new cards or new story beats - it's a curated collection built specifically to solve a problem: getting Arena to 99% parity with paper Pioneer.
What is Pioneer Masters?
Pioneer Masters (set code PIO) is a digital-only reprint set, meaning every card in it already exists in a physical Magic: The Gathering product. Nothing here is Arena-exclusive in terms of card design - what's exclusive is the packaging. Wizards of the Coast pulled together cards from across the Pioneer-legal card pool (sets from Return to Ravnica forward) and assembled them into a single, draftable set built for MTG Arena.
The set was designed with two goals running in parallel: filling out the archetype gaps that Explorer had left open, and being a genuinely enjoyable Limited format in its own right. That's a tricky balance to strike - a set built purely as a reprint vehicle can feel like a pile of unrelated cards in a draft pod - so the design team had to think carefully about which cards to include and how they'd interact across a draft table.
Format check: Pioneer Masters is legal in Pioneer (and by extension, Explorer/Pioneer on Arena) but not in Standard, Modern, or any other format where the original printings wouldn't have been legal.
The Explorer-to-Pioneer transition
To understand why Pioneer Masters matters, it helps to know a little history about Explorer.
Explorer launched on MTG Arena in April 2022 as a deliberately provisional format. Wizards were transparent about this from the start: Explorer was a placeholder, a format that would expand over time as more Pioneer-legal cards made it onto Arena. The long-term goal was always full Pioneer parity, but getting there card by card through individual set releases was going to take years.
Pioneer Masters was the shortcut. By bundling hundreds of missing Pioneer staples into a single release, it got Arena to 99% parity with paper Pioneer in one move - which is a remarkable thing to do with a single set release.
The consequence of that was announced in October 2024, a couple of months before the set dropped: once Pioneer Masters went live in December, Explorer would be renamed Pioneer on MTG Arena. The placeholder format had served its purpose and could finally retire the asterisk.
Themes and mechanics
Because Pioneer Masters draws from sets spanning roughly a decade of Magic - from Return to Ravnica (2012) through to sets released just before the Pioneer cutoff - it contains an enormous range of mechanics. Rather than introducing anything new, the set is a showcase of Pioneer's mechanical breadth.
That breadth is part of what makes the Limited format interesting. In a typical draft set, the mechanics are tightly controlled and the synergies are carefully woven together by the design team. Pioneer Masters has a different texture: it's assembling cards that were originally designed for wildly different environments and asking them to coexist in a draft pod. In my experience, sets like this tend to reward players who can read the table and find the synergies hiding in unexpected places, rather than following a predetermined draft guide.
Limited and draft
Wizards specifically noted that Pioneer Masters was designed to be "a fun experience on its own" - not just a Constructed delivery mechanism. That's a meaningful promise when you're building a draft set from reprints, because the temptation is always to just jam the most powerful cards and call it a day.
The 398-card set size gives the format room to breathe. With that many cards in the pool, draft archetypes can be supported across multiple colour pairs without any single strategy dominating every pod. The inclusion of a bonus sheet - a Pioneer-legal supplementary set of cards associated with Pioneer Masters - adds another layer of texture to the Limited environment, giving drafters access to cards that can slot into multiple archetypes.
Rules note: The Pioneer Masters bonus sheet is Pioneer-legal, consistent with how the main set works. Cards from the bonus sheet follow the same legality rules as the rest of Pioneer Masters.
The bonus sheet
Pioneer Masters includes a bonus sheet - a curated selection of Pioneer-legal cards that appear as special inserts within the set. Bonus sheets have become a familiar feature of Magic sets in recent years, and they serve a similar function here: broadening the card pool available in a draft without inflating the main set's card count, and giving players a chance to open exciting cards they might not have encountered in the base set.
The Pioneer Masters bonus sheet is also Pioneer-legal, keeping it fully consistent with the set's core purpose.
Set legacy
It's genuinely hard to overstate what Pioneer Masters accomplished in a single release. Explorer had been a popular format, but it always carried the weight of incompleteness - players knew they weren't getting the full Pioneer experience, and the best paper Pioneer decks sometimes didn't translate cleanly to Arena because key pieces were missing.
Pioneer Masters closed that gap. The renaming of Explorer to Pioneer on Arena is the clearest possible signal of what the set achieved: a digital format that had been "good enough" for two and a half years finally became the real thing.
For Limited players, it opened up a draft format with unusual depth - one that rewards knowledge of Magic's history across a decade of sets rather than mastery of a single new expansion's mechanics.
And for the broader Arena ecosystem, it represents a model for how Wizards can use digital-only reprint sets to solve structural format problems quickly, rather than waiting for individual card reprints to trickle through over years of standard releases. Whether we'll see more sets built on this template is an open question, but Pioneer Masters makes a compelling case that it can work.













