Wolf Pack
Creature — Wolf
You may have this creature assign its combat damage as though it weren't blocked.
- CMC
- 8
- Mana cost
- Color identity
- G
- Rarity
- rare
- Set
- Portal Three Kingdoms
- Price
- $112.99
- EDHREC rank
- #27132
Wolf Pack is a repeatable, on-board power pump that grows your creatures' combat effectiveness every turn without requiring any combo infrastructure to function. It earns its slot through raw board presence, but the seven-mana cost means you need a deck that can reliably hit that threshold before the effect pays off.
Format Analysis
Where it lives, where it can’t
| Format | Verdict |
|---|---|
| commander | legal |
| legacy | legal |
| modern | not legal |
| pioneer | not legal |
| standard | not legal |
| vintage | legal |
| pauper | not legal |
| oathbreaker | legal |
Wolf Pack is legal in Commander, Legacy, Vintage, and Oathbreaker, and that's effectively the full list of formats where it can show up. In practice, Legacy and Vintage have no interest in a seven-mana creature-pump enchantment when those formats end games on turns one through three. Commander is the only realistic home — the longer game, higher life totals, and creature-combat emphasis give Wolf Pack the runway it needs to generate value. Oathbreaker is legal but shares enough of Commander's structure that the same logic applies at a smaller scale.
Key Combos
Combo lines featuring this card
Budget Alternatives
Cheaper options that do most of the same work
Wolf Pack's niche is reusable, unconditional power grants across a creature base, and Beastmaster Ascension covers similar ground for under $1 — it requires attacking to level up but eventually gives +5/+5 to every creature, which outpaces Wolf Pack on a crowded board. Overwhelming Stampede is another option near the same price point: it's a one-shot effect rather than a permanent, but it frequently ends the game outright in a way Wolf Pack cannot.
Price Context
Current price
$112.99 premium tier
At $112.99, Wolf Pack sits firmly in premium territory driven almost entirely by scarcity from a single old printing rather than competitive demand. It holds that price the way most Reserved List cards do — collector interest props up the floor — but if you're evaluating it purely on gameplay return, the price-to-impact ratio is poor compared to modern alternatives.
Explore
Sources
Mentioned
Updated . Data from Scryfall, EDHREC, and Commander Spellbook.