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
- Color identity
- W
- Rarity
- rare
- Set
- Eventide
- Price
- $7.60
- EDHREC rank
- #15013
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
| Format | Verdict |
|---|---|
| commander | legal |
| legacy | legal |
| modern | legal |
| pioneer | not legal |
| standard | not legal |
| vintage | legal |
| pauper | not legal |
| oathbreaker | legal |
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


Endless HorizonsGoblin Charbelcher
Near-infinite damage to one opponent; Arrange your library in any order
View on Commander Spellbook ↗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
Sources
Mentioned
- Goblin Charbelcher
Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.