Arabian Nights
Magic collectors want chronology, finish awareness, and context about why a card matters across formats and eras.
A tradeable basket for the whole set.
Coverage is live on 0% of the set right now, which is enough to show the market center even before the long tail fully fills in.
premium treatments is the dominant rarity band in this release, while headline cards is the strongest card-family signal on the page today.
Magic collectors want chronology, finish awareness, and context about why a card matters across formats and eras.
Real activity where we have it, honest signals where we do not.
Where the card count is concentrated.
The best current storefronts touching this lane.
Continue the chronology.
Heat signal across the full set.
The strongest gainers right now.
Cards losing momentum in the current window.
Built for real set goals, not generic wishlists.
VaultStore completion tracking is designed for any-copy, any-variant, grade-specific, and language-specific goals. This page already knows the full card map; the collector layer sits on top of it.
Sign in to import a collection CSV, auto-claim VaultStore purchases, or manually mark cards as owned.
Why this set matters right now.
Reserved List icons, Commander staples, foils, borderless treatments, and modern premium printings all route through the same browse surface.
Foundations is the cleanest current on-ramp for cataloging modern staples.
Beta and Arabian Nights remain the benchmark history surfaces every serious collectible page gets measured against.
A destination page, not just a listing grid.
Arabian Nights, released in December 1993, was Magic: The Gathering's third expansion set following Limited Edition Beta and Antiquities. The 92-card set marked a significant shift in Magic's design philosophy by introducing the game's first thematic world-building through Arabian folklore aesthetics. This represented early experimentation with flavor-driven set design that would become standard practice. The set's card pool proved highly influential despite limited print runs and distribution challenges. Bazaar of Baghdad emerged as a format staple, fundamentally enabling graveyard-focused strategies across multiple formats. Other notable cards like Library of Alexandria, Erg Raiders, and Singing Tree established powerful effects that shaped early competitive Magic. The set's scarcity and age have made high-grade copies exceptionally valuable to collectors. Arabian Nights occupies a unique position in Magic history as a bridge between the game's chaotic early years and its more structured design era, while its limited availability ensures continued collector interest and premium pricing for key cards.
A great Magic catalog page needs to explain finish splits, print treatments, and why the set still matters across formats.
Arabian Nights sits inside the live magic archive. and matters because it combines set identity, chase hierarchy, and live market behavior in one place.
VaultStore currently tracks 0 cards on this page, with 0 distinct variant treatments represented across the set.
The set page uses append-only price observations to estimate both a full-set basket and a chase-card basket, with coverage percentages shown whenever the underlying market is still thin.
Yes. Completion tracking is designed to support any-copy, variant-specific, and grade-specific collector goals, with import-first flows for collectors who are not yet buying everything through VaultStore.