Last updated on April 21, 2026

Snapcaster Mage | Illustration by Volkan Baga
Lorwyn has been totally eclipsed, the Turtles are back in their sewers, and all of Strixhaven's secrets have been laid bare. Which means it's time for the spoiler goblins to start leaking whatever comes next.
What better way to celebrate Secrets of Strixhaven going live on MTG Arena than to start leaking cards from Reality Fracture, this October's big Standard set, and the last in-universe set of the year. We've got a happy jaunt through super hero land and Middle-earth once more before we get there, but Reality Fracture has more buzz surrounding it than any other set this year. And if these first few leaks are any indication, we're in for a real switch up in October.
Disclaimer
Make that a double disclaimer, actually. The “cards” that were leaked on Monday have not been confirmed as real, and if they are, they contain at least minor spoilers from what to expect from Reality Fracture. Let's see what poor-quality card images dropped on the internet this time.
Reality Fracture “Leaks”



So yeah, that's blue Chandra. Which, as strange as it looks at first glance, fits perfectly in line with the black Ral Zarek we saw in Secrets of Strixhaven, as well as the white Liliana teased at the end of the Lorwyn Eclipsed story.

In fact, there's been a White Lili image circulating for a while now, which bares a striking aesthetic resemblance to this supposed Stingcaster Mage card. Both cards show a “color-shifted” version of a popular Magic card, which fractured shards in the card art that reveal that card's “normal” identity. In the case of “Stingcaster Mage”, you can see glimpses of Snapcaster Mage peeking through.
The Chandra's equally strange. We've got a reprint of Chandra, Torch of Defiance squaring off against a mono-blue version of the planeswalker. The arts seem to line up in such a way that the two Chandras occupy the same scene, locked in battle against one another.
That's the running theory about Reality Shift, that it's a new take on Planar Chaos that's going to invert the identities of a bunch of popular planeswalkers and MTG characters, and possibly much more beyond that. Planar Chaos released in 2007 and gave us a look at what an alternate version of Magic might look like, resulting in color-swaps on cards like Damnation vs. Wrath of God. All signs point towards Reality Shift doing something very similar.
There's also the whole Jace thing, and while I'm no MTG lore historian, everyone knows Jace has been poking around/breaking the multiverse. And if these leaks are to believed, the set symbol is literally a little Jace face. And then there's this whole Hexhaven thing that keeps floating around too, but again, we're still a ways away from the set to really start digging into that.
Real or Not?
Every now and then someone slips a fake MTG card through that looks real enough to catch people off-guard (did any one else fall for the Pox-Liliana during SOS spoiler season?). More often than not, these blurred leaks that drop half a year before the set's release end up being real, and these three cards certainly meet all of the qualifications, from syntax to art and so on.
The only thing that really catches me up is the collector numbers. Chandra, Torch of Defiance appears to have a collector number of 244, and “Chill of Compliance” appears to be in the low 200s as well, possibly 212. A blue card in a normal-sized MTG set would land below #100 in most sets; for example, the three blue mythics in SOS are #44, #45, and #58. So why is this blue Chandra up in the 200s, and why isn't there that big of a gap between this blue card and the red Chandra, with a whole color separating them in WUBRG order?
There might be some bonus sheet or collation shenanigans going on here, but all three of these cards use the same FRA set code, suggesting they're all part of the main set. The Stingcaster Mage has a collector number up in the 300s, but that usually makes sense for borderless cards, and this is likely an alternate art version of that card anyway.
There's also the fact that the blue Chandra is a bit… on the nose. Seriously, “Chill of Defiance”? Even if that's real it's not exactly subtle, and it's low-hanging fruit for anyone who wanted to take a crack at faking an alternate-reality Chandra. What else are we going to get, Jace, the Mind Carpenter? Oko, Thief of Gowns? Ugin, the Spirit Wagon? The Chandra parallel's a bit too precise to be taken too seriously, though it seems clever enough to me to mirror the abilities of a popular planeswalker card to produce a colorshifted version of it. That also means it's pretty easy to mock something up.
I'm leaning towards yes, these are probably real, but with the caveat that the collector numbers don't make sense to me, and that the naming convention on the “flipped” Chandra is a bit eye-rolly. Outside of that, I'm not finding too many reasons to say “FAKE!” and move on, but we'll know in due time. But first, let's enjoy Secrets of Strixhaven while we've got it.
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