Last updated on February 9, 2026

Timeless Dragon - Illustration by Anastasia Ovchinnikova

Timeless Dragon | Illustration by Anastasia Ovchinnikova

Exciting and complex play awaits you in MTG Arena's Timeless format. “No Banned List” is Timeless' middle name and the most simple way to describe it is you get to play every card available on MTG Arena.

Timeless is a Vintage-like format on MTGA, and cards like fetch lands and Historic‘s banlist cards are legal. What’s more, every time a new card is added to Arena, it's automatically added to Timeless, regardless of the card’s power, so you won’t have to think about what can or can’t be played there. It’s a format that has an ever-evolving metagame and today you'll learn all you need to know about it.

Let's dive in.

What is Timeless?

Timeless Lotus - Illustration by Lindsey Look

Timeless Lotus | Illustration by Lindsey Look

Timeless is a 60-card Constructed Eternal format that allows you to play with every single card available on MTGA. If the card has ever been released on the client, then it’s legal in Timeless. And that’s the main difference between Timeless and Historic, because Historic has banned cards like Oko, Thief of Crowns, and cards that were never legal there, like Counterspell.

Timeless was created due to the huge popularity of events like Historic No Banned List in December 2023. Quoting WotC: “During the two-week event, over 3 million games of the Historic No Banned List event were played. The most-engaged players averaged over 100 games a day! This shattered our expectations and proved that there is an audience for this type of event”.

This allows WotC to release cards on MTGA that aren't legal in Historic. The only caveat is that cards can get restricted in Timeless instead of banned, mimicking Vintage in tabletop MTG. Cards like Channel were restricted from the get-go, and more cards can get restricted should WotC deem it necessary.

Who is Timeless For?

If you enjoyed the Historic No Cards Banned events, this is your format. Strictly speaking, this format is aimed at high-level players and veteran players who enjoy playing high-powered formats. MTG players who love Legacy and Vintage will find a home here. These formats usually have dozens of viable decks in between tiers 1-2 and reward tight play and format knowledge.

This format rewards players with a deep pool of MTG Arena cards. If you’re more of a beginner player or new to Arena, I’d recommend sticking with Standard by upgrading your starter decks before diving into Timeless, the same way I wouldn’t recommend a new player to buy into a format like paper Modern.

Timeless-Legal Sets

Timeless includes all of the following:

Are Special Edition Cards Legal in Timeless?

Special Edition cards are legal in Timeless only if they were already released and available on MTG Arena.

Does the Timeless Format Rotate?

Timeless does not rotate. Timeless is considered an Eternal format, so once a card is on MTG Arena, it's forever legal in Timeless, and would only be restricted later for metagame balance reasons.

What Happens When a Card is Restricted in Timeless?

If a card is restricted in Timeless, and you happen to have more than one in your collection, you’ll get up to three wildcards of the corresponding rarity, as you’ll still be able to use at least one restricted copy. You don't get more wildcards from a card you’ve already got something from. For example, I already received four mythic wildcards from Arena when Oko, Thief of Crowns was banned in Standard, so if Oko were to be restricted in Timeless someday, I would not get any wildcards.

Timeless Rules

Timeless is your regular 60-card minimum Constructed format with a 15-card sideboard (a 7-card sideboard for best-of-one), following the same rules as Standard, Historic, and Pioneer. As usual, you start with seven cards in hand and 20 life. This format allows us to play with companions, so those rules apply as well. You’ll be able to play best-of-one and best-of-three matches in traditional play. What sets this format apart from others is the available card pool.

Timeless Banned and Restricted list

Like Vintage, Timeless won’t have any banned cards. At most, cards will be restricted to one copy of a card among your main deck and sideboard. The current restricted cards for Timeless are: 

There are no banned cards in Timeless.

Timeless vs Historic

Here’s where things get confusing for most players, so let’s break it down. At first, Historic was the Eternal, non-rotating format on MTG Arena where you could play all the cards on the client. Fast forward to the release of Strixhaven: School of Mages and there were some cards released as part of the Mystical Archive. Most of them weren’t legal in Standard or Historic, like Dark Ritual and Counterspell, for fear of breaking the format, while others were legal in Historic (Memory Lapse, Time Warp) and did break the format! For the first time, cards released in MTG Arena would not be automatically legal in Historic. It was clear from there that WotC could release cards into MTGA but already pre-banned in Historic, like Sneak Attack and Spreading Seas.

Historic Banned Cards are Playable

Here lies the main difference between both formats. Bluntly speaking, Timeless is equal to Historic without banned cards. That’s the main concept. So what does that mean exactly?

There are dozens of cards on MTGA that are banned in Historic and legal in Timeless, and you can play four copies in your deck. So, you can play four copies of Counterspell, Lightning Bolt, and Swords to Plowshares in your Timeless decks, while you don’t get to play with them at all in Historic.

Rebalanced Exceptions

Three cards that are banned in Historic are restricted in Timeless, so you can play only one of these in a given Timeless deck: Channel, Demonic Tutor, and Tibalt's Trickery.

Digital-only cards released in Alchemy sets are equally legal in Pioneer and Timeless. These will have the same version in both formats. For example, Crucias, Titan of the Waves will forever be a 3/1, although it was originally a 3/3.

There’s a difference between digitally rebalanced cards too. In Timeless, all the paper cards that were rebalanced for Alchemy/Historic revert to their original tabletop counterparts. So, cards like Goldspan Dragon and Silver-Fur Master are legal in Timeless as their original paper version, while in Historic you play with the rebalanced version.

Fetches

Where to Play Timeless

Timeless is a format that’s exclusive to MTG Arena, like Historic. Tabletop MTG and MTGO have other Eternal formats at their disposal, like Vintage, Legacy, and Commander. Timeless has its own queue in MTGA, like Historic, Pioneer, and Standard. You’ll be able to join both ranked and unranked queues for Timeless matches. We can expect future pro-level competition playing Timeless on MTGA as well because you already see pro players battling in MTGA exclusive formats, whether as a Pro Tour format or a Pro Tour qualifier.

Is Timeless Good for Beginners?

Sorry, but Timeless is not the best format for beginners. The thing is, when formats get powerful, the gameplay decisions matter a lot. This format has a broad card pool, so it becomes hard to know what your opponents will play. Finally, there's the problem of card availability. Beginner players usually won’t have a deep card pool, so a top-tier deck will be very expensive in rare and mythic wildcards. Try out this format with a regular Standard deck to test the waters, and you're likely to get wrecked.

Does Timeless Have the Power 9?

Oracle of the Alpha

Timeless does not have the Power 9 since these cards are not on MTG Arena. It’s possible to play them via cards like Oracle of the Alpha, but they will be copies conjured straight into your deck. Who knows, maybe WotC will release a Timeless Anthology with the Power 9?

What Are the Best Cards in Timeless?

While the format continues to mature, there have been some frontrunners since the format's inception:

Turn 1 Dark Ritual into Necropotence is a combo almost as old as myself. With Necropotence you can draw cards to your heart’s content, being able to combo off in different ways, though that's been made much less reliable with Necro being restricted. MTGA even has Tendrils of Agony to enable storm decks.

Turn 1 Delighted Halfling or Birds of Paradise into turn 2 Oko, Thief of Crowns is a strong start for green decks. Using Oko to make Food will give you a lot of life to deal with aggressive decks, or you can neuter their best threats by turning them into 3/3 elks. Once Upon a Time raises this deck’s consistency a lot.

Natural Order is a way to sacrifice a green creature and get a much bigger one. You can cheat big beasts into play like Atraxa, Grand Unifier and Craterhoof Behemoth this way.

Control decks have a lot of tools at their disposal, whether playing Mana Drain and Swords to Plowshares, or being proactive with Thoughtseize and Inquisition of Kozilek.

Red decks have cards like Ragavan, Nimble Pilferer and Lightning Bolt, as well as an excellent piece of nonbasic land hate in Blood Moon.

Channel

Channel allows you to pay 8-10 life to ramp a giant Eldrazi on turn 2. It’s capable of very broken starts, but playing only one in a deck reduces the consistency a lot.

Infinite extra turns are possible via cards like Wilderness Reclamation, Time Warp, and Nexus of Fate.

Thassa's Oracle is a proven win condition, and a strong combo with Underworld Breach. We can mill ourselves with Breach and cast Oracle from the graveyard, winning from there.

Show and Tell is playable in this Arena format, and with tutors like Demonic Tutor or Assemble the Team, you can often cast Show and Tell on turn 3, cheating big spells like Omniscience or Atraxa, Grand Unifier into play.

In Timeless, you can also combo Grief and Fury with cards like Reanimate or Undying Malice.

Timeless Decks

The Timeless metagame is huge and there are all sorts of aggro, midrange, combo, and control decks viable, so let’s review a few decks to give you a notion of the format. You may also want to check our Best Budget Decks in Timeless ranking for decks with very few rares or mythics.

Sultai Show and Tell

Show and Tell - Illustration by Donato Giancola

Show and Tell | Illustration by Donato Giancola

This deck harnesses the power of Show and Tell, allowing you to cheat Atraxa, Grand Unifier or Omniscience into play, while other decks won’t get the same benefits. Playing a Show and Tell against a deck like Boros () Energy gives them a 2-drop, so it’s good against aggressive decks if you can survive in the early game.

Mardu Midrange

Grief - Illustration by Nicholas Gregory

Grief | Illustration by Nicholas Gregory

Mardu () Midrange gets to play powerful cards like Grief and Fury that can be cast for full value or as free spells by pitching other cards. There’s some value to be obtained by reanimating cards like Solitude, Phlage, Titan of Fire's Fury, or Oliphaunt. As with all midrange decks, you can have a good first game against the field and specialize in a certain matchup by adding more removal or disrupting combos.

Boros Energy

Ocelot Pride - Illustration by Chris Seaman

Ocelot Pride | Illustration by Chris Seaman

Boros () Energy is a boogeyman of many formats. You have a very fast deck that gains life with Guide of Souls and has a very powerful cat payoff in Ajani, Nacatl Pariah. Binding these two things is Ocelot Pride, a powerful cat that also wants to gain life. This decklist has ways to generate energy as well as to spend it, and it can be very fast. All these 1-drops and 2-drops can be recurred by Lurrus of the Dream-Den. Also, cards like Amped Raptor or Static Prison are very efficient spells and use the energy efficiently.

Landless Charbelcher

Goblin Charbelcher - Illustration by Jesper Ejsing

Goblin Charbelcher | Illustration by Jesper Ejsing

Goblin Charbelcher benefits from a deck without lands, and the way you trim lands is by having MDFCs. Activating Goblin Charbelcher often wins you the game on the spot. All the lands in this deck are MDFCs, and you can also generate mana via cards like Chromatic Sphere. The rest of the consists of “eggs” (Magic slang for cheap artifacts that you can sacrifice to draw a card) and with all this redundancy you can find Charbelcher faster, or tutor it with Wishclaw Talisman.

Timeless Communities

Timeless is discussed in some places, and if the format gets more popular, we’ll have more and more communities. Here are a few spots to chat about Timeless:

Draftsim Discord

Draftsim Discord is a place to discuss all MTG formats out there, including Timeless.

MtG: Eternal Discord

The MtG: Eternal Discord has channels for Timeless brewing and lots more Magic discussions like Brawl, Cube, and card balance.

Timeless Subreddit

Timeless Subreddit is the main subreddit to discuss Timeless in-depth, whether about deck choices, sideboard options, the metagame, and more.

MTG Arena Subreddit

Timeless sometimes shows up as the subject of discussion on the MTG Arena subreddit but there's so much more discussion going on there. 

Wrap Up

Chronostutter - Ilustration by Seb McKinnon

Chronostutter | Illustration by Seb McKinnon

Timeless is a high-powered format that will evolve as new formats and powerful cards get released. Cards from Modern Horizons 3 got added to Arena, and are super powerful and impactful. The format has a long way to go to be Vintage-level powerful. It is the “cheapest” way to play a high-powered format, without having the Reserved List or $500 cards.

You can call Timeless “Vintage-lite.” It’s also nice that WotC supports formats that people want, and this gives me hope for something like Gladiator to become an Arena-supported format someday. Have you tried Historic No Bans Timeless? What cards are you eager to play? Let me know in the comments, or discuss it in the Draftsim Discord’s Timeless section.

Thank you for reading, and by the way, how much time have you spent with a loved one today?

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