What Is Reality Fracture?
Reality Fracture is Magic's autumn 2026 expansion, built around Jace Beleren's answer to the fracturing of the multiverse: the Echoverse. Where the original Multiverse contains familiar planes and beloved characters, the Echoverse is a mirror dimension where those same figures exist in twisted, inverted forms. The same soul. A different reality.
Wizards describe it as "a clash of epic proportions" where original multiverse versions of iconic characters meet their Echoverse counterparts. Mechanically, this is expressed through echoed pairs: every Play Booster contains a card alongside its Echoverse variant, positioning the set as something structurally unusual. If Strixhaven was a university of magical colleges, Reality Fracture is what happens when that same university is turned inside out and rebuilt from the other side of the mirror.
Four cards were revealed at Magiccon, and they tell the whole story of what this set is trying to do. Two of them are the same planeswalker. One of them might be the most valuable serialised card in years.
Bloodline Recollector // Ancestral Craving
(While it's prepared, you may cast a copy of its spell. Doing so unprepares it.)
In any sacrifice-based Commander deck, this is a three-mana engine. The trigger is easy to satisfy: sacrifice three tokens to a Viscera Seer, Yawgmoth, or Phyrexian Altar and you end the turn prepared. The copy of Ancestral Craving comes down for free and does not exile the back face, meaning Bloodline Recollector stays on the battlefield, ready to do it again next turn.
The life loss is real, but in black you have Soul Warden effects, Pontiff of Blight, or simply a high enough life total that drawing nine cards in three turns makes it irrelevant. This is exactly the kind of repeatable value engine that sacrifice decks have always wanted at two mana on the front face.
Reality Fracture's marquee serialised card is a special alternate art treatment of Bloodline Recollector illustrated by Mark Poole, limited to 500 numbered copies in English Collector Boosters. If that name is familiar, it should be: Mark Poole illustrated Ancestral Recall in the original Alpha set in 1993. The back face of Bloodline Recollector, Ancestral Craving, is a black-shifted Ancestral Recall: draw three cards, pay three life instead of {U}. Wizards have created a callback that only collectors who know the history will fully appreciate. The 500-copy limit makes this one of the rarest serialised cards produced in recent years.
The Two Chandras: The Echoverse Made Flesh
Chandra Nalaar has been in Magic since 2007. In nearly two decades she has appeared on dozens of cards across Kaladesh, Amonkhet, War of the Spark, and beyond. Every single one has been red. Her identity is fire, rage, impulse, and pyromancy. She is, definitionally, a red planeswalker.
The Echoverse disagrees.
Reality Fracture reveals two Chandras in the same set: the original Chandra, Torch of Defiance reprinted from Kaladesh, and a wholly new Chandra, Chill of Compliance, who is blue. Mono-blue. This is not a joke. This is not a split card. Chill of Compliance is a blue-only planeswalker with the Chandra name and the Chandra planeswalker type, and she is the most striking single demonstration of what the Echoverse means as a concept. These two cards are, by design, an echoed pair.
Chandra, Chill of Compliance — The Blue Inversion
The +1 that puts a noncreature, nonland card back from surveil is exceptional card selection. Miss on the surveil and you net nothing, but hit and you have filtered your draw for free while keeping loyalty. In a spell-heavy Commander deck this fires reliably. The second +1 is a restricted Lotus Petal: free {U} for your next noncreature spell the same turn, letting her function as an accelerant in spellslinger builds.
The ultimate at -6 is an instant-win condition in any spell-heavy deck. One emblem and every cantrip, removal spell, or countermove draws an additional card. Reaching -6 from 3 loyalty takes patience, but both +1 abilities build toward it safely. She goes wide without ever going negative, meaning a patient pilot can ultimate her in four or five turns without haste.
Chandra, Torch of Defiance — The Echo
Read the two Chandras side by side and the design becomes clear. Torch's -7 emblem deals 5 damage whenever you cast a spell. Chill's -6 emblem draws a card whenever you cast a spell. Fire versus knowledge. Aggression versus control. The same soul, split across realities, reaching the same conclusion through fundamentally opposite philosophies.
Torch of Defiance has always been a Commander staple for red mana acceleration and burn value. Its reprint in Reality Fracture is deliberate: Wizards want both versions in the same Draft environment so players can open the pair and hold the contrast in their hands. It is already legal in Commander, makes colourless mana from its +1 in two-land hands, and remains one of the strongest four-drop planeswalkers ever printed in red.
Stingcaster Mage
When this creature enters, target instant or sorcery card in your graveyard gains flashback until end of turn. The flashback cost is equal to its mana cost.
The key word here is "until end of turn" and "the flashback cost is equal to its mana cost." This is not a discounted flashback: you pay full price. What it gives you is the option, the same turn Stingcaster Mage enters, to recast any instant or sorcery in your graveyard at its original cost.
With haste, Stingcaster Mage can attack the same turn it arrives. But more importantly: flicker it, blink it, bounce it and recast it, and each time it enters it grants a new flashback target. In a Riku of Two Reflections deck or any shell running Ephemerate, each entry is a free spell from the graveyard. The mythic rarity signals this is intentionally pushed, and it will slot immediately into Izzet spellslinger and reanimator shells that want to loop high-value instants.
All Four Revealed Cards
New Mechanics
Products
What to Expect
Reality Fracture is positioned as a set with enormous Commander upside. The Multiverse Reforged Commander deck puts Jace at the helm of an Echoverse-themed shell, and the set's density of legendary creatures (confirmed by Wizards as a deliberate design priority) means a large new pool of commanders will become available when it releases in October.
The two Chandras arriving simultaneously in the same set is the headline for Commander players right now. Chill of Compliance goes into blue spellslinger and control builds immediately. Torch of Defiance gets a reprint that will suppress its price and put it back within reach for players who skipped the original Kaladesh printing. Both are desirable, and the echoed-pairs structure means opening one makes finding the other easier.
Bloodline Recollector is the card to watch for the competitive Commander community. A two-mana Vampire Warlock that converts sacrifice triggers into free draw-three effects is exactly the kind of engine that warps formats. Expect it to define the early weeks of Commander with the new set.
More cards will be revealed as spoiler season begins in earnest. Commander Oracle will cover every new card as it drops. Prerelease is September 25.