Last updated on January 27, 2026

Providence of Night - Justin Gerard

Providence of Night | Illustration by Justin Gerard

Right, Alchemyโ€ฆ kind of forgot about that for a second. The increase in Universes Beyond means a downtick in Alchemy sets, which for some people is the most Catch 22 situation they can find themselves in, as it pertains to Magic.

We've got confirmation that Alchemy will be returning with Lorwyn Eclipsed, which is proof that the Arena team will continue to release Alchemy add-ons for in-universe sets. Expect a batch of 30ish cards on February 3, including one particularly eye-popping 5-color legend with the weirdest mana cost you've seen since Progenitus hit the scene.

Providence of Night

Providence of Night is a new digital-only commander coming to MTG Arena and all its formats that support Alchemy cards. With a mana cost that looks like it was ripped straight from RoboRosewater, and a typeline that's being a little too friendly with the set symbol, Providence is a direct 5-color payoff for running all the best hybrid cards you can dig up on Arena.

The ridiculous casting cost already has people joking around about r/custommagic (people are notorious for creating custom cards with convoluted costs), and it doesn't help that there's already a running joke about 5-color commanders, and how every recent set needs a rainbow commander for a main theme of the set. It's basically the Bear with Set's Mechanic joke, but for 5-color commanders instead. See: Cosmic Spider-Man, Heroes in a Half Shell, Aang, Master of Elements, Infinite Guideline Stationโ€ฆ the list continues.

So with all that buffoonery behind us, how's the card? Well, assuming you can cast it, it's probably just alright. Just to make another Progenitus comparison, protection from monocolored reads better than it plays, since it doesn't save your creature from multicolored spells or most board wipes. It does stave off Swords to Plowshares and five copies of Playful Shove, and โ€œprotectionโ€ makes it harder to deal with in combat, than, say, hexproof from monocolored. But it's still dead to a counterspell, Wrath of God, etc.

Maelstrom Nexus

Assuming you can stick it for a turn and follow up with some hybrid spells, it's a one-way ticket to value town. Think Maelstrom Nexus, but with higher upside. It's a fairly prescriptive commander, since it only works with a smaller subset of cards, but it encompasses all possible hybrid cards with its color identity, and hybrid's been featured much more heavily in recent sets.

Why Digital-Only?

Mutable Explorer - Illustration by Wayne Reynolds

Mutable Explorer | Illustration by Wayne Reynolds

It's pretty clear that Providence of Night could have been printed in paper, which is a bummer for anyone who sees this and gets excited about running it in Commander. Alchemy sets have been using โ€œpaper-friendlyโ€ designs much more often lately, and paper sets have been adapting digital-only mechanics at a higher clip, too (Mutable Explorer basically has conjure, Curious Colossus riffs on perpetual, etc.).

Skyshroud Ambush

Copying spells has well-defined rules in paper, so even though there's a tracking issue with playing a card like this in person, it's not new territory for physical Magic cards. The only thing I can see holding it back is the text that directly references โ€œhybrid manaโ€. There aren't any other cards in MTG that use this terminology, so maybe there's some unintuitive issue that comes up from referencing it in paper. Sort of like how Skyshroud Ambush mentions โ€œwinning a fightโ€œ; It's intuitive what that means, but perhaps more complex when you spell it out in the rules. Maybe โ€œhybrid manaโ€ causes problems in rules text, and they didn't want to make adjustments for a single โ€œdigital-onlyโ€ card. Or, maybe they just ran out of room in the main set. Who knows?

Best Hybrid Cards

Jegantha, the Wellspring - Illustration by Chris Rahn

Jegantha, the Wellspring | Illustration by Chris Rahn

Without devolving into a full-on listicle, here are some of the standout hybrid cards you could run in a Providence of Night deck (looking at the Arena cardpool only):

That's just touching the surface, and a cursory Scryfall search brings up 235 hybrid cards you might consider for a deck featuring Providence of Night.

Of course, you could always try to Rule 0 this for Commander night with your friends and expand the options even further. Jamming this in a deck with Reaper King sounds like a great time, if you ask me.

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3 Comments

  • Fin January 28, 2026 9:07 am

    “digital only”, “commander”…anyone see the problem here? Dumb article.

    • Timothy Zaccagnino
      Timothy Zaccagnino January 28, 2026 7:37 pm

      Hmmm, wonder what that thing people put in that one zone in Brawl is called….

    • Kazik February 1, 2026 2:52 pm

      I may be wrong, but I was sure that card leading your Brawl deck is called commander as well.

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