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Magic’s Final Fantasy 1 Scene Box goes all in on D&D-inspired Party mechanics

Magic's Final Fantasy 1 Scene Box goes all in on D&D-inspired Party mechanics
Magic's Final Fantasy 1 Scene Box goes all in on D&D-inspired Party mechanics

New Final Fantasy cards arrive in Magic: The Gathering Dec. 5 in the form of a Chocobo Bundle and four Scene Boxes. The birdy bundle includes a ton of promo reprints of cards from the standard set with stylish anime-inspired art, while the Scene Boxes have mostly new cards that together form iconic scenes from Final Fantasy 1, Final Fantasy 8, Final Fantasy 9, and Final Fantasy 15 (along with a few play boosters). They’re undeniably a desirable collector’s item for fans of each game, and while the quality of the new cards is all over the place mechanically, FF1’s Garland at the Chaos Shrine scene goes all-in on leveraging a beloved game mechanic: Party.

Party” first debuted in 2020’s Zendikar Rising set and leans heavily on classic fantasy party composition, namely the typical Dungeons & Dragons lineup of Warrior, Cleric, Rogue, and Wizard. Plenty of cards from that set offer benefits based on the number of party members or even having a “full party” with one of each creature type. It popped up again with the Commander Legends: Battle for Baldur’s Gate commander decks in 2022, especially with the white-black Party Time deck focusing specifically on the mechanic.

All four creature subtypes are represented in the base Final Fantasy set without explicitly leaning into the Party mechanic, but Garland at the Chaos Shrine changes that with the four Warriors of Light.