Tarkir: Dragonstorm Promos (PTDM) — Set Guide
Promo sets don't always get the spotlight they deserve, but Tarkir: Dragonstorm Promos (PTDM) is worth knowing about if you're playing in organised events or chasing alternate-art versions of cards from the main set. PTDM collects the promotional printings tied to Tarkir: Dragonstorm - the 2025 set that brought Magic back to one of its most beloved planes.
What is Tarkir: Dragonstorm Promos?
PTDM is the promo companion set to Tarkir: Dragonstorm (TDM), Wizards of the Coast's 2025 return to Tarkir. Like all promo sets, it isn't a standalone product you draft or buy in booster packs - it's a collection of alternate-art or foil-treatment versions of cards distributed through organised play events, store programs, and special promotions tied to the main release.
The parent set, Tarkir: Dragonstorm, was first teased at the 2023 Announcement Day panel at Gen Con Indiana. Wizards described it as a "best of both worlds" combination of Khans of Tarkir (2014) and Dragons of Tarkir (2015) - bringing back the five factionalized clans and the dragons that define the plane's identity. Prerelease events ran from April 4-10, 2025.
Format check: Cards in PTDM are legal in the same formats as their counterparts in the main Tarkir: Dragonstorm set. The promo printing doesn't change legality - only the art and finish differ.
Themes and mechanics of the parent set
To understand what makes these promos exciting, it helps to know what Tarkir: Dragonstorm is about mechanically.
The set's story centers on dragonstorms - massive magical tempests pouring dragons out across the plane of Tarkir. Each storm rips through the Omenpaths, threatening the wider Multiverse. The five resurgent clans of Tarkir band together to push back against this threat, which means the set delivers on both sides of the original Tarkir block's appeal: factional, clan-based gameplay and dragon-forward power.
One of the most visually distinctive features of Tarkir: Dragonstorm is the Ghostflame card treatment - a special alternate treatment found on 10 cards across the set, reflecting Ugin's presence and influence woven through the entire story. If any of those 10 cards receive promo versions, expect them to be among the most sought-after in PTDM.
Promos and how to get them
The confirmed promo tied to the Tarkir: Dragonstorm release period is:
- Standard Showdown promo: Snakeskin Veil with a Cowboy Bebop crossover art treatment. This is distributed through Standard Showdown events at local game stores.
Beyond that, the full scope of PTDM's 160 cards likely covers the range of typical organised play promo slots - Prerelease promos, Friday Night Magic cards, Buy-a-Box promos, and similar store and event rewards. I'd recommend checking your local game store's event schedule or the Wizards of the Coast event locator for exactly which promos are available through which programs, as availability varies by region and store.
Rules note: Promo cards are functionally identical to their non-promo counterparts. If you open a promo at a Prerelease, it plays exactly the same as the version from a draft booster.
Lore and setting
Tarkir is a plane shaped by the tension between its dragon overlords and its deeply factionalized human clans. The original Khans of Tarkir block told a time-travel story across two timelines - one where the clans fought the dragons, one where the dragons won. Tarkir: Dragonstorm marks the conclusion of what Wizards calls the Dragonstorm Arc, and it's clearly drawing on the emotional weight of both those timelines.
The Story Spotlights for the set - the cards that trace the main narrative beat by beat - are:
- Rally the Monastery
- Stormplain Detainment
- United Battlefront
- Stillness in Motion
- Narset's Rebuke
- Sarkhan's Resolve
- Call the Spirit Dragons
Narset and Sarkhan both appear prominently, which feels right - they're the two characters most personally tied to Tarkir's complicated history. The arc ends, appropriately, with a call to the spirit dragons themselves.
Ugin's influence threads through the set as well, expressed mechanically through those Ghostflame treatments. Whether that means Ugin plays a direct role in the story resolution, I'm not certain - the source material doesn't make that explicit - but his fingerprints are clearly all over the plane.
Set legacy
Tarkir: Dragonstorm carries significant nostalgia weight. Tarkir is one of the most beloved settings in Magic's history, and the original block is still fondly remembered for its draft format and worldbuilding. Wizards' stated goal - combining the clan identity of Khans with the dragon-centric power of Dragons of Tarkir - is ambitious, and how well they pulled it off will likely define how this set is remembered.
For PTDM specifically, the Cowboy Bebop crossover art on Snakeskin Veil is a notable moment. Universes Beyond crossover treatments on promo slots are becoming more common, and this one in particular is likely to be a collector's item for fans of both Magic and the anime.
The Ghostflame treatment cards, if any appear in promo form, will almost certainly be the centerpiece of PTDM from a collecting standpoint - they represent one of the most distinctive visual identities the set introduces.















