Magic: The Gathering designer reveals details about wild one-of-a-kind new Commander deck

Magic: The Gathering designer reveals details about wild one-of-a-kind new Commander deck


According to Magic: The Gathering’s official card database, there are only two cards in the trading card game’s entire history that are white-blue-black-red. Most color combinations have Ravnica guild, Tarkir clan, and/or Strixhaven college names associated with them. Yet for this ultra-rare combo, there isn’t a clean name we can reference, like Golgari or Izzet. Magic’s principal designer Gavin Verhey just calls it WUBR (pronounced “woober”), a phonetic transcription of each color’s official initials. This one’s also an obvious riff on the shorthand used for the five-color WUBRG (“wooburg”).

Despite WUBR’s rarity, it’s about to take center stage in the upcoming Reality Fracture set for the preconstructed Commander deck.

During an in-person interview at MagicCon: Las Vegas 2026, Verhey confirmed to Polygon that he led the design of that deck, which was revealed during a preview panel on the first day of the convention. Based on official product imagery revealed during the panel, that WUBR deck is called Multiverse Reforged. The two lines on the box describing the deck’s strategies simply say “make tokens” and “warp reality to power up.”

Image: Wizards of the Coast

Reality Fracture is really a love letter to Magic fans,” Verhey said. “That was really fun to get to build and create.” Behind the scenes in recent years, the Planeswalker and Mind Mage Jace Beleren cast a powerful spell in an attempt to rewrite reality. Reality Fracture at large is described as a “what if” capstone set, where Jace has rewritten the Multiverse into his idea of perfection. But he’s accidentally created something closer to an unsettling dystopia that perverts many of our preconceived notions about the multiverse, its mana colors, and many characters.

Wizards of the Coast’s official description of the Commander deck reads as follows: “Reimagine a new Multiverse with Jace at the helm and a deck full of alternate-reality versions of beloved Magic creatures. Reveal your master plan by replacing tokens with these new twisted creatures and bring order, just the way Jace envisioned it!”

“This deck is like no Commander deck we’ve ever made before,” Verhey said. “There are some new cards in there that I think people are going to flip out over.” While not quite as chock-full of new cards as Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles’ Turtle Power! deck, according to the Amazon listing, Multiverse Reforged will introduce 18 brand-new cards to Commander.

Why only one new Commander deck with Reality Fracture? Verhey said it has a lot to do with past trends in similar sets, where one deck features the interesting new villains and the other has the heroes. He called Phyrexia: All Will Be One the “poster child” for this potential problem. “We’re on Phyrexia: Would you rather buy the cool Phyrexian deck with the infect mechanic that’s returning, or the red-white token mirror deck?” he said. “It wasn’t even close.” Verhey said that many game stores reported selling Corrupting Influence eight-to-one versus Rebellion Rising. Current market rates put the price of the Phyrexian deck at more than double the price of the other deck, which only speaks further to its enduring popularity.

Verhey said the team knew that a single Reality Fracture deck had to be truly unique to stand out, which is how they landed on the rare color combination and a deck archetype unlike anything else that’s been done before.

hero shot reality fracture Image: Wizards of the Coast

Over in the main set, every booster pack will have a legendary character and an Echoverse variant. The flagship example showcased at MagicCon is a reprint of a red Chandra Planeswalker and an icy blue variant. In a press Q&A with Magic’s head designer Mark Rosewater, he confirmed that Reality Fracture will also feature one-off Echoverse non-creature spells. Another card revealed at MagicCon, Bloodline Recollector, comes with a new instant as a prepared spell: Ancestral Craving, a black riff on Ancestral Recall. Both in the main set and the Commander deck, it seems like we can expect similar flavorful reworks. “You’re on the right track,” Verhey admitted when asked outright about this.

Verhey hinted that the Commander deck is where Wizards could explore characters who can’t appear in the main set’s paired Echoverse mechanic — including those who are already dead in Magic’s canon. “On the bonus sheet, we couldn’t put any characters that were dead, because we’d have to show their current version in our universe and their altered universe version,” he explained. “But if they’re deceased, there isn’t a current version.”

That opens the door for alternate-reality versions of fan-favorite figures like Gideon Jura or Dack Fayden — maybe even Urza. Their stories ended years ago, but could be reimagined under Jace’s rewritten Echoverse.

Why is green the only color omitted in Multiverse Reforged? There may be a surprisingly holistic explanation for that beyond WUBR’s rarity. In a December blog post about green’s color identity, Mark Rosewater delivered a complex breakdown of its philosophy. Yes, green has lots of trees, plants, and elves tied to nature. But it also taps into thematic principles about the natural order of things: life, death, rebirth. Green is about growth through acceptance.

“I think the core difference between myself and the rest of the Magic colors is that I’m the one color not advocating for change,” Rosewater wrote from the perspective of green. “We don’t have to fix the world. It’s perfect as it is. Our goal in life should involve learning to accept what is rather than focusing on what could be. Nature is a perfect system. It’s simple yet complex. Aggressive yet peaceful. Huge yet intimate. It is the height of elegance, and oh-so beautiful.”

In other words, the philosophy of green runs completely antithetical to the mad machinations of a mind mage willing to fracture reality itself in an attempt to rid the multiverse of his own trauma. Perhaps nothing in the history of Magic perverts nature quite like what’s going on in Reality Fracture. In that sense, “woober” is the perfect fit.



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