The second half of the Innistrad spooky double feature, Crimson Vow, is set to release in November to eager fans everywhere.
The sequel to Innistrad: Midnight Hunt is coming soon with Innistrad: Crimson Vow set to release online 11 November 2021 and globally 19 November 2021.
To recap and get fans up to speed, in Midnight Hunt, the humans from the realm went to the annual Harvestide ritual in hopes of restoring the balance of night and day. Unfortunately, they were thwarted by an attack from the werewolves and the land was sent into an endless night. And who loves the night? Vampires.
And thus Innistrad: Crimson Vow will focus heavily on vampires and the increasing humans joining the fight to stop the endless night. The focal point of this set is indeed a wedding as the name Crimson Vow suggests. It is the wedding of Olivia Voldaren (vampiress wanting to solidify her power in Innistrad) and groom Edgar Markov, from the other most powerful family in the plane.
As fans dedicated to the deep lore of MTG, Innistrad is home to a delightful array of characters terrifying and terrible. Vampires, humans, creatures such as demons and slugs, ghosts and spirits, and even powerful artifacts.
Let’s get to the cards and what one can expect to find in the packs and boxes that will be available soon.
Innistrad: Crimson Vow - Card Overview
Dracula Series
Expect 18 cards here as inspired by the 1897 novel Dracula by Bram Stoker with re-imagined artwork featuring characters, objects and locales. The first 17 cards can be found in either the Collector Boosters or the single-card Box Topper, with the final 18th card only found in the Buy-a-Box promotion.
The Collector Booster is guaranteed to have one non-foil Dracula series card as well as an opportunity to get a further two Dracula series cards in foil.
Draft Boosters
Find two double-faced cards in each pack, perfect for drafting Magic on game night as well as one showcase eternal night basic land within the 15 cards found here. And be on the lookout for a traditional foil card of any rarity in every one of three packs.
Booster Fun cards will feature eternal night cards (featuring legendary creatures), borderless dual lands (ten new lands abound) and borderless planeswalkers, plus fang frames showcasing the 30 vampires of the main set plus add-on of Sorin the Mirthless.
Set Boosters
If you need to add Vampires to your deck, this is the place to find them as well as the Innistrad: Crimson Vow Commander cards. Set Boosters have a pack perfect for your needs.
The Crimson Vow Set Boosters will have an eternal night basic land (15% of the time in traditional foil), plus an art card (95%) or signature art card (5%). The List will be there too in 1/4 of the Set Boosters, with 75 cards exchanged out to bring fresh reprints.
In the wildcard slot, there are 8 new cards - 6 rares and 2 mythic rares - that could be found and are perfectly designed for Commander players.
Collector Boosters
Find a combo of 5 rares and/or mythic rares here, and expect two of them to be in traditional foil, along with the 8 traditional foil cards and one traditional foil double-faced token.
These boosters are aimed at players wanting the most deadly cards in the set.
What else is there to be found in the new Innistrad: Crimson Vow?
Prerelease Packs will contain 6x Draft Boosters, 1x foil-stamped rare or mythic rare, 3x double-faced helper cards, an MTG Arena code card, and a spindown.
Theme boosters, six in total, will have one for every color plus a focused Vampire theme.
Commander decks will be available in two versions. Vampiric Bloodline (a black-red deck) and Spirit Squadron (a white-blue deck), with each showcasing 15 new commander cards and a foil-etched commander.
Head on over to our Pre-Sale page for all of the Magic: The Gathering, Innistrad: Crimson Vow packs, boxes and cases - and reserve yours today!
We’ll end this sneak peek with a quote direct from Magic: The Gathering’s Harless Snyder -
“…Please do read all the details carefully. At this wedding, there's a fine line between being on the guest list and being on the menu. . . “