Endless Horizons

Enchantment

When this enchantment enters, search your library for any number of Plains cards, exile them, then shuffle.
At the beginning of your upkeep, you may put a card you own exiled with this enchantment into your hand.

CMC
4
Mana cost
{3}{W}
Color identity
W
Rarity
rare
Set
Eventide
Price
$7.60
EDHREC rank
#15013
Buy on TCGplayer
Endless Horizons card art
Endless Horizons pulls every Plains out of your deck on entry, guaranteeing a land drop every turn for the rest of the game — that consistency is the entire point. The payoff is real, but the cost is just as real: any deck running Goblin Charbelcher wins by having zero lands in the library, which means Endless Horizons is an auto-include in that archetype and a liability in everything else.

Format Analysis

Where it lives, where it can’t

FormatVerdict
commander
legacy
modern
pioneer
standard
vintage
pauper
oathbreaker

Commander is where Endless Horizons sees its most legitimate play — 100-card singleton decks reward cards that smooth out land variance over a long game, and white's ramp limitations make reliable land drops genuinely valuable. Outside of niche combo shells like Goblin Charbelcher lists, it's mostly a Commander card; Legacy and Vintage have far more efficient mana infrastructure and no reason to spend four mana on a land-sorting enchantment. Modern is legal but the card sees no meaningful play there — the format is too fast and too threat-dense for a setup piece this slow.

Key Combos

Combo lines featuring this card

Budget Alternatives

Cheaper options that do most of the same work

Endless Horizons is doing two things at once — thinning the deck and guaranteeing future land drops — and no single cheap card replicates both. Emeria's Call and similar modal land-spells address the land-drop problem from a different angle, while Weathered Wayfarer gives you a repeatable Plains-fetch at one mana, covering the consistency role at a lower price point and without the all-in commitment.

Price Context

Current price

$7.60 mid tier

At $7.60, Endless Horizons sits in mid-tier pricing — expensive enough to feel like a deliberate inclusion, not so expensive it's a barrier. It holds value primarily because it occupies a unique design space in white: no other card vacuums Plains out of the library this efficiently, which keeps demand steady among dedicated white-heavy and Charbelcher brewers.

Explore

Mentioned

  • Goblin Charbelcher

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Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.