Last updated on February 26, 2026

Shivan Dragon (7th Edition) | Illustration by Donato Giancola
If your brain is still trying to process Lorwyn Eclipsed and Wizards is already dangling the next pizza-dripping Standard prerelease in front of you, youโre not alone. The feeling that Magic's Standard format would be better if the set release cadences slowed down a bit is whatโs fueling Planar Standard, a community-run, rotating format that trims the legal card pool down to something closer to โold Standard.โ
And it's not just an idea: Planar Standard have been going on for a few months now, and the community has just announced the Planar Standard Championship on MTG Arena.
What is Planar Standard?

Planar Genesis โ Illustration by Liiga Smilshkalne
Planar Standard is a player-run format built around a simple idea: Keep a two-year rotating window of Universes Within Magic sets. Right now, thatโs 2025 + 2026, so just Aetherdrift, Tarkir: Dragonstorm, Edge of Eternities, and Lorwyn Eclipsed. And it keeps Foundations as a non-rotating โcore set.โ
The ban list is pretty short: Just Cori-Steel Cutter.
Who Created Planar Standard, and When Did it Start?
Judging by reddit threads, the main organizer behind the format is u/Edoardo_Beffardo, who originally called it โType 2โ (a nod to what Standard used to be called) when announcing the format, and was launched around November last year.
One early critique from other players was that โType 2โ was too close of a homage, and it's impossible to google for โtype 2 Magicโ without hitting WotC's original, discontinued format.
โI would propose โPlanar Standardโ, citing both the intended format and the in-universe focus of the card pool,โ suggested u/ded_possum. Shortly afterwards, the community held a vote in their Discord and Planar Standard won. A few days later, Edoardo_Beffardo announced on reddit that the format's name had been changed.
Is Planar Standard an Anti-UB Club?
Edoardoโs stance (paraphrased) is basically: They are not here to wage ideological war on Universes Beyond. They say they're โfairly indifferentโ to Universes Beyond as a concept. The main idea behind Planar Standard is to cut down on the amount of playable sets; it's a format for MTG players that find that there are too many releases. Excluding Universes Beyond sets is the cleanest way to reduce the yearly flood, so to speak, and is very easy to communicate.
In other words, ignoring Universes Beyond MTG sets is a pragmatic shortcut to trimming the amount of legal sets, and UB fans are explicitly welcome (with the expectation that people donโt act like goblins about it!).
Whatโs the Planar Standard Meta Like?
Thereโs an (extremely!) in-depth Meta Guide covering the formatโs early โbeta seasonโ (October 2025โJanuary 2026), built from 127 decks, 68 players, and 15 tournaments. Before Lorwyn Eclipsed, things looked pretty balanced, with Midrange a bit over-represented in the meta share but very evenly split when it comes to win rate.
| ARCHETYPE FAMILY | ASSOCIATED ARCHETYPES | META SHARE | TOTAL W-L | WIN RATE |
| Aggro | 15 | 29% | 166-169 | 50% |
| Midrange | 29 | 44% | 250-259 | 49% |
| Control | 14 | 27% | 161-150 | 52% |
How to Join Planar Standard

Interplanar Beacon โ Illustration by Adam Paquette
If a slower, non-UB Standard format has piqued your interest (or if you're just looking for a New York-less formatโฆ), your best bet as first stop is the Planar Standard subreddit, which includes a detailed thread about finding Planar Standard players.
They also run the Planar Standard Discord server, which they mention as the best place to find players you can challenge.
Planar Standard looks like one of the more โthis is an actual thing, not a shower thoughtโ attempts at a new format weโve seen in a while!
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