This is a list of all Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour events. [1] [2] [3] Pro Tours are professional, invite-only tournaments featuring large cash prizes. The World Championships were considered a Pro Tour from 1996 to 2011, but were discontinued in 2012. When the World Championship was reintroduced in 2013 it was changed to a smaller scale non-Pro Tour event. From 2019, Pro Tours were rebranded Mythic Championships, three of which per year were held with physical cards, three in Magic: The Gathering Arena . From 2020, they were again rebranded as Players Tour events, with twelve events to be held each year: three series per year, each consisting of three regional events (Americas, Europe, and Asia–Pacific) which served as qualifiers for a single finals event for that series. MTG Arena would also offer Pro Tour-like events still called Mythic Invitationals, with a US$750,000 prize pool.
However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all in-person events scheduled to occur after 9 February 2020 were cancelled until further notice; a different set of MTG Arena tournaments were scheduled in their place. In particular, the 2020 season was reworked by cancelling the April finals event for Players Tour Series 1, and replacing the three regional events of Players Tour Series 2 with four online events dubbed Players Tour Online, followed by a single online event in August that served as the finals for both Series 1 and Series 2. The Mythic Invitationals planned for May and July (to coincide with the releases of Ikoria: Lair of Behemoths and Core 2021, respectively) were also replaced by a single Mythic Invitational in September. Both the Series 1/2 Final and the 2020 Mythic Invitational served as qualifiers for a 32-player event to culminate the 2020 season, called the 2020 Season Grand Finals. [4] A yet another rebranding had the most high-profile MTG events, still held solely online on MTG Arena due to the pandemic, called X Championships for the next two seasons, the X marking the name of the most recent published set.
Finally, in February 2023, physical events returned, once again called Pro Tours, alongside an MTG Arena-only series called Arena Championships. The new Pro Tours, the name returning after a 4½ year absence, are currently held three times a year, twice in North America and once in Europe. The Pro Tours are named after the most recent set, which is also played during the booster draft portion of the competition.
The first Pro Tour was held in New York City in 1996. Invitations are usually earned by winning a qualifier tournament. Other means of qualifying include finishing high in the previous Pro Tour, World Championships, Spotlight Series tournament, or receiving an entry due to being in the Magic Hall of Fame.
* | World Championship |
Played in MTG Arena | |
† | denotes format used for the individual Top 8 in mixed-format PTs |
Season | Name [a] | Location | Host country | Format | Date | Prize | Winner [5] | Players |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | — | New York | United States | Standard (modified [b] ) | 16–18 February 1996 | $30,000 | Michael Loconto | 239 |
1996 | — | Los Angeles | United States | Booster Draft | 5–7 May 1996 | $100,000 | Shawn "Hammer" Reigner | 179 |
1996 | — | Columbus | United States | Block Constructed | 6–7 July 1996 | $125,000 | Olle Råde | 136 |
1996 | — | Seattle * | United States | mixed | 14–18 August 1996 | $132,000 | Tom Chanpheng | 125 |
1996–97 | — | Atlanta | United States | Sealed Deck | 13–15 September 1996 | $150,000 | Frank Adler | 192 |
1996–97 | — | Dallas | United States | Standard | 22–24 November 1996 | $150,000 | Paul McCabe | 242 |
1996–97 | — | Los Angeles | United States | Rochester Draft | 28 February–2 March 1997 | $150,000 | Tommi Hovi | 236 |
1996–97 | — | Paris | France | Block Constructed | 11–13 April 1997 | $150,000 | Mike Long | 223 |
1996–97 | — | New York | United States | Booster Draft | 30 May–1 June 1997 | $150,000 | Terry Borer | 259 |
1996–97 | — | Seattle * | United States | mixed | 13–17 August 1997 | $250,000 | Jakub Slemr | 153 |
1997–98 | — | Chicago | United States | Extended | 10–12 October 1997 | $151,635 | Randy Buehler | 324 |
1997–98 | — | Mainz | Germany | Rochester Draft | 5–7 December 1997 | $151,635 | Matt Place | 291 |
1997–98 | — | Los Angeles | United States | Block Constructed | 6–8 March 1998 | $151,635 | David Price | 342 |
1997–98 | — | New York | United States | Booster Draft | 17–19 April 1998 | $151,635 | Jon Finkel | |
1997–98 | — | Seattle * | United States | Booster Draft, Standard†, Block Constructed, Team Sealed | 12–16 August 1998 | $251,620 | Brian Selden | 203 |
1998–99 | — | Chicago | United States | Rochester Draft | 25–27 September 1998 | $151,635 | Dirk Baberowski | 324 |
1998–99 | — | Rome | Italy | Extended | 13–15 November 1998 | $151,635 | Tommi Hovi | 266 |
1998–99 | — | Los Angeles | United States | Rochester Draft | 26–28 February 1999 | $151,635 | Steven O'Mahoney-Schwartz | 337 |
1998–99 | — | New York | United States | Block Constructed | 30 April–2 May 1999 | $151,635 | Casey McCarrel | 308 |
1998–99 | — | Yokohama * | Japan | Standard†, Rochester Draft, Extended, Team Sealed | 4–8 August 1999 | $251,620 | Kai Budde | 208 |
1999–00 | — | Washington, D.C. | United States | Team Rochester | 3–5 September 1999 | $100,230 | Rob Dougherty Dave Humpherys Darwin Kastle | 243 |
1999–00 | — | London | Great Britain | Booster Draft | 15–17 October 1999 | $151,635 | Kyle Rose | 310 |
1999–00 | — | Chicago | United States | Extended | 3–5 December 1999 | $151,635 | Bob Maher, Jr. | 344 |
1999–00 | — | Los Angeles | United States | Booster Draft | 4–6 February 2000 | $151,635 | Trevor Blackwell | 337 |
1999–00 | — | New York | United States | Block Constructed | 14–16 April 2000 | $151,635 | Sigurd Eskeland | 310 |
1999–00 | — | Brussels * | Belgium | Standard†, Booster Draft, Block Constructed, Team Sealed | 2–6 August 2000 | $251,620 | Jon Finkel | 273 |
2000–01 | — | New York | United States | Team Rochester | 29 September–1 October 2000 | $202,200 | Scott Johns Mike Turian Gary Wise | 330 |
2000–01 | — | Chicago | United States | Standard | 1–3 December 2000 | $200,130 | Kai Budde | 332 |
2000–01 | — | Los Angeles | United States | Rochester Draft | 2–4 February 2001 | $200,130 | Michael Pustilnik | 327 |
2000–01 | — | Tokyo | Japan | Block Constructed | 16–18 March 2001 | $200,130 | Zvi Mowshowitz | 270 |
2000–01 | — | Barcelona | Spain | Booster Draft | 4–6 May 2001 | $200,130 | Kai Budde | 335 |
2000–01 | — | Toronto * | Canada | Standard†, Booster Draft, Extended, Team Rochester | 8–12 August 2001 | $399,200 | Tom Van de Logt | 296 |
2001–02 | — | New York | United States | Team Rochester | 7–9 September 2001 | $202,200 | Kai Budde Dirk Baberowski Marco Blume | 426 |
2001–02 | — | New Orleans | United States | Extended | 2–4 November 2001 | $200,130 | Kai Budde | 355 |
2001–02 | — | San Diego | United States | Rochester Draft | 11–13 January 2002 | $200,130 | Farid Meraghni | 348 |
2001–02 | — | Osaka | Japan | Block Constructed | 15–17 March 2002 | $200,130 | Ken Ho | 277 |
2001–02 | — | Nice | France | Booster Draft | 3–5 May 2002 | $200,130 | Eivind Nitter | 332 |
2001–02 | — | Sydney * | Australia | Standard†, Booster Draft, Block Constructed, Team Rochester | 14–18 August 2002 | $372,200 | Carlos Romão | 245 |
2002–03 | — | Boston | United States | Team Rochester | 27–29 September 2002 | $200,100 | Kai Budde Dirk Baberowski Marco Blume | 363 |
2002–03 | — | Houston | United States | Extended | 8–10 November 2002 | $200,130 | Justin Gary | 351 |
2002–03 | — | Chicago | United States | Rochester Draft | 17–19 January 2003 | $200,130 | Kai Budde | 349 |
2002–03 | — | Venice | Italy | Block Constructed | 21–23 March 2003 | $200,130 | Osyp Lebedowicz | 310 |
2002–03 | — | Yokohama | Japan | Booster Draft | 9–11 May 2003 | $200,130 | Mattias Jorstedt | 243 |
2002–03 | — | Berlin * | Germany | Standard†, Booster Draft, Extended, Team Rochester | 6–10 August 2003 | $421,130 | Daniel Zink | 309 |
2003–04 | — | Boston | United States | Team Rochester | 12–14 September 2003 | $200,100 | Brock Parker Matt Linde William Jensen | 399 |
2003–04 | — | New Orleans | United States | Extended | 30 October–2 November 2003 | $200,130 | Rickard Österberg | 318 |
2003–04 | — | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Rochester Draft | 16–18 January 2004 | $200,130 | Nicolai Herzog | 346 |
2003–04 | — | Kobe | Japan | Block Constructed | 27–29 February 2004 | $200,130 | Masashiro Kuroda | 239 |
2003–04 | — | San Diego | United States | Booster Draft | 14–16 May 2004 | $200,130 | Nicolai Herzog | 312 |
2003–04 | — | Seattle | United States | Team Rochester | 9–11 July 2004 | $200,100 | Kamiel Cornelissen Jelger Wiegersma Jeroen Remie | 321 |
2003–04 | — | San Francisco * | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft, Block Constructed, Team Rochester | 1–5 September 2004 | $416,130 | Julien Nuijten | 304 |
2005 | — | Columbus | United States | Extended | 29–31 October 2004 | $200,130 | Pierre Canali | 286 |
2005 | — | Nagoya | Japan | Rochester Draft | 28–30 January 2005 | $200,130 | Shu Komuro | 236 |
2005 | — | Atlanta | United States | Team Rochester | 11–13 March 2005 | $200,100 | Gabriel Tsang David Rood Gabriel Nassif | 357 |
2005 | — | Philadelphia | United States | Block Constructed | 6–8 May 2005 | $194,898 | Gadiel Szleifer | 311 |
2005 | — | London | Great Britain | Booster Draft | 8–10 July 2005 | $200,130 | Geoffrey Siron | 314 |
2005 | — | Los Angeles | United States | Extended | 28–30 October 2005 | $200,130 | Antoine Ruel | 340 |
2005 | — | Yokohama * | Japan | Standard†, Booster Draft, Extended, Team Rochester | 30 November–4 December 2005 | $403,130 | Katsuhiro Mori | 287 |
2006 | — | Honolulu | United States | Standard | 3–5 March 2006 | $240,245 | Mark Herberholz | 410 |
2006 | — | Prague | Czech Republic | Booster Draft | 5–7 May 2006 | $240,245 | Takuya Osawa | 415 |
2006 | — | Charleston | United States | Team Block Constructed | 16–18 June 2006 | $234,000 | Tomohiro Kaji Shouta Yasooka Tomoharu Saitou | 525 |
2006 | — | Kobe | Japan | Booster Draft | 20–22 October 2006 | $240,245 | Jan-Moritz Merkel | 388 |
2006 | — | Paris * | France | Standard†, Booster Draft, Extended, Team Rochester | 29 November–3 December 2006 | $465,245 | Makihito Mihara | 356 |
2007 | — | Geneva | Switzerland | Booster Draft | 9–11 February 2007 | $240,245 | Mike Hron | 387 |
2007 | — | Yokohama | Japan | Block Constructed | 20–22 April 2007 | $240,245 | Guillaume Wafo-Tapa | 387 |
2007 | — | San Diego | United States | Two-Headed Giant Booster Draft | 29 June–1 July 2007 | $240,500 | Chris Lachmann Jacob Van Lunen | 390 |
2007 | — | Valencia | Spain | Extended | 12–14 October 2007 | $240,245 | Remi Fortier | 424 |
2007 | — | New York * | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft, Legacy, Team Two-Headed Giant Booster Draft | 6–9 December 2007 | $407,800 | Uri Peleg | 386 |
2008 | — | Kuala Lumpur | Malaysia | Booster Draft | 15–17 February 2008 | $230,795 | Jon Finkel | 346 |
2008 | — | Hollywood | United States | Standard | 23–25 May 2008 | $230,795 | Charles Gindy | 371 |
2008 | — | Berlin | Germany | Extended | 31 October–2 November 2008 | $230,795 | Luis Scott-Vargas | 454 |
2008 | — | Memphis * | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft, Extended, Team Constructed (Standard, Extended, Legacy) | 11–14 December 2008 | $437,670 | Antti Malin | 329 |
2009 | — | Kyoto | Japan | Standard†, Booster Draft | 27 February–1 March 2009 | $230,795 | Gabriel Nassif | 381 |
2009 | — | Honolulu | United States | Block Constructed, Booster Draft† | 5–7 June 2009 | $230,795 | Kazuya Mitamura | 396 |
2009 | — | Austin | United States | Extended†, Booster Draft | 16–18 October 2009 | $230,795 | Brian Kibler | 417 |
2009 | — | Rome * | Italy | Standard†, Booster Draft, Extended, Team Constructed (Standard, Extended, Legacy) | 19–22 November 2009 | $437,670 | André Coimbra | 409 |
2010 | — | San Diego | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 19–21 February 2010 | $230,795 | Simon Görtzen | 413 |
2010 | — | San Juan | Puerto Rico | Block Constructed, Booster Draft† | 28–30 May 2010 | $230,795 | Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa | 396 |
2010 | — | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Extended†, Booster Draft | 3–5 September 2010 | $230,795 | Paul Rietzl | 457 |
2010 | — | Chiba * | Japan | Standard†, Booster Draft, Extended, Team Constructed (Standard, Extended, Legacy) | 9–12 December 2010 | $437,670 | Guillaume Matignon | 352 |
2011 | — | Paris | France | Standard†, Booster Draft | 10–13 February 2011 | $230,795 | Ben Stark | 483 |
2011 | — | Nagoya | Japan | Block Constructed, Booster Draft† | 10–12 June 2011 | $230,795 | David Sharfman | 364 |
2011 | — | Philadelphia | United States | Modern†, Booster Draft | 2–4 September 2011 | $230,795 | Samuele Estratti | 417 |
2011 | — | San Francisco * | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft, Modern, Team Constructed (Standard, Modern, Legacy) | 17–20 November 2011 | Jun'ya Iyanaga | 375 | |
2012 | Pro Tour Dark Ascension | Honolulu | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 10–12 February 2012 | $233,500 | Brian Kibler | 445 |
2012 | Pro Tour Avacyn Restored | Barcelona | Spain | Block Constructed†, Booster Draft | 11–13 May 2012 | $233,500 | Alexander Hayne | 379 |
2012–13 | Pro Tour Return to Ravnica | Seattle | United States | Modern†, Booster Draft | 19–21 October 2012 | $233,500 | Stanislav Cifka | 383 |
2012–13 | Pro Tour Gatecrash | Montreal | Canada | Standard†, Booster Draft | 15–17 February 2013 | $250,000 | Tom Martell | 329 |
2012–13 | Pro Tour Dragon's Maze | San Diego | United States | Block Constructed†, Booster Draft | 17–19 May 2013 | $250,000 | Craig Wescoe | 388 |
2013–14 | Pro Tour Theros | Dublin | Ireland | Standard†, Booster Draft | 11–13 October 2013 | $250,000 | Jérémy Dezani | 428 |
2013–14 | Pro Tour Born of the Gods | Valencia | Spain | Modern†, Booster Draft | 21–23 February 2014 | $250,000 | Shaun McLaren | 393 |
2013–14 | Pro Tour Journey into Nyx | Atlanta | United States | Block Constructed†, Booster Draft | 16–18 May 2014 | $250,000 | Patrick Chapin | 349 |
2013–14 | Pro Tour Magic 2015 | Portland | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 1–3 August 2014 | $250,000 | Ivan Floch | 358 |
2014–15 | Pro Tour Khans of Tarkir | Honolulu | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 10–12 October 2014 | $250,000 | Ari Lax | 357 |
2014–15 | Pro Tour Fate Reforged | Washington, D.C. | United States | Modern†, Booster Draft | 6–8 February 2015 | $250,000 | Antonio Del Moral León | 407 |
2014–15 | Pro Tour Dragons of Tarkir | Brussels | Belgium | Standard†, Booster Draft | 10–12 April 2015 | $250,000 | Martin Dang | 407 |
2014–15 | Pro Tour Magic Origins | Vancouver | Canada | Standard†, Booster Draft | 31 July–2 August 2015 | $250,000 | Joel Larsson | 393 |
2015–16 | Pro Tour Battle for Zendikar | Milwaukee | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 16–18 October 2015 | $250,000 | Kazuyuki Takimura | 367 |
2015–16 | Pro Tour Oath of the Gatewatch | Atlanta | United States | Modern†, Booster Draft | 5–7 February 2016 | $250,000 | Jiachen Tao | 390 |
2015–16 | Pro Tour Shadows over Innistrad | Madrid | Spain | Standard†, Booster Draft | 22–24 April 2016 | $250,000 | Steve Rubin | 378 |
2015–16 | Pro Tour Eldritch Moon | Sydney | Australia | Standard†, Booster Draft | 5–7 August 2016 | $250,000 | Lukas Blohon | 302 |
2016–17 | Pro Tour Kaladesh | Honolulu | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 14–16 October 2016 | $250,000 | Shouta Yasooka | 466 |
2016–17 | Pro Tour Aether Revolt | Dublin | Ireland | Standard†, Booster Draft | 3–5 February 2017 | $250,000 | Lucas Esper Berthoud | 425 |
2016–17 | Pro Tour Amonkhet | Nashville | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 12–14 May 2017 | $250,000 | Gerry Thompson | 378 |
2016–17 | Pro Tour Hour of Devastation | Kyoto | Japan | Standard†, Booster Draft | 28–30 July 2017 | $250,000 | Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa | 462 |
2017–18 | Pro Tour Ixalan | Albuquerque | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 3–5 November 2017 | $250,000 | Seth Manfield | 455 |
2017–18 | Pro Tour Rivals of Ixalan | Bilbao | Spain | Modern†, Booster Draft | 2–4 February 2018 | $250,000 | Luis Salvatto | 464 |
2017–18 | Pro Tour Dominaria | Richmond | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 1–3 June 2018 | $250,000 | Wyatt Darby | 460 |
2017–18 | Pro Tour 25th Anniversary | Minneapolis | United States | Team Trios Constructed | 3–5 August 2018 | $850,000 | Allen Wu Ben Hull Gregory Orange | 495 |
2018–19 | Pro Tour Guilds of Ravnica | Atlanta | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 9–11 November 2018 | $250,000 | Andrew Elenbogen | 510 |
2018–19 | Mythic Championship I | Cleveland | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 22–24 February 2019 | $500,000 | Autumn Burchett | 498 |
2018–19 | Mythic Championship II | London | Great Britain | Modern†, Booster Draft | 26–28 April 2019 | $500,000 | Eli Loveman | 515 |
2018–19 | Mythic Championship III | Las Vegas | United States | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 21–23 June 2019 | $750,000 | Matias Leveratto | 68 |
2018–19 | Mythic Championship IV | Barcelona | Spain | Modern†, Booster Draft | 26–28 July 2019 | $500,000 | Thoralf Severin | 458 |
2018–19 | Mythic Championship V | Long Beach | United States | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 18–20 October 2019 | $750,000 | Javier Dominguez | 68 |
2018–19 | Mythic Championship VI | Richmond | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 8–10 November 2019 | $500,000 | Ondřej Stráský | 495 |
2018–19 | Mythic Championship VII | Long Beach | United States | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 6–8 December 2019 | $750,000 | Piotr Głogowski | 68 |
2020 | Players Tour Brussels 2020 (Series 1, Europe) | Brussels | Belgium | Pioneer†, Booster Draft | 31 January – 2 February 2020 | $200,000 | Joel Larsson | 384 |
2020 | Players Tour Nagoya 2020 (Series 1, Asia-Pacific) | Nagoya | Japan | Pioneer†, Booster Draft | 1–2 February 2020 | $150,000 | Kenta Harane | 192 |
2020 | Players Tour Phoenix 2020 (Series 1, Americas) | Phoenix | United States | Pioneer†, Booster Draft | 7–9 February 2020 | $250,000 | Corey Burkhart | 354 |
2020 | Players Tour Online 1 (Series 2) | Online | N/A | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 13-14 June 2020 | $150,000 | Elias Watsfeldt | 195 |
2020 | Players Tour Online 2 (Series 2) | Online | N/A | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 13-14 June 2020 | $150,000 | Ryuji Murae | 242 |
2020 | Players Tour Online 3 (Series 2) | Online | N/A | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 19-20 June 2020 | $150,000 | William Craddock | 151 |
2020 | Players Tour Online 4 (Series 2) | Online | N/A | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 20-21 June 2020 | $150,000 | Akira Asahara | 317 |
2020 | Players Tour Finals 2020 (Series 1 and 2) | Online | N/A | Standard, played on MTG Arena | 25 July - 1 August 2020 | $250,000 | Kristof Prinz | 145 |
2020 | 2020 Mythic Invitational | Online | N/A | Historic, played on MTG Arena | 10–13 September 2020 | $250,000 | Seth Manfield | 160 |
2020 | 2020 Season Grand Finals | Online | N/A | Standard†, Historic, played on MTG Arena | 9–11 October 2020 | $250,000 | Austin Bursavich | 32 |
2020-21 | Zendikar Rising Championship | Online | N/A | Historic†, Standard, played on MTG Arena | 4–6 December 2020 | $250,000 | Brad Barclay | 184 |
2020-21 | Kaldheim Championship | Online | N/A | Standard†, Historic, played on MTG Arena | 26-28 March 2021 | $250,000 | Arne Huschenbeth | 211 |
2020-21 | Strixhaven Championship | Online | N/A | Historic†, Standard, played on MTG Arena | 4-6 June 2021 | $250,000 | Sam Pardee | 251 |
2021-22 | Innistrad Championship | Online | N/A | Historic†, Standard, played on MTG Arena | 3-5 December 2021 | $450,000 | Yuuki Ichikawa | 252 |
2021-22 | Neon Dynasty Championship | Online | N/A | Alchemy†, Historic, played on MTG Arena | 11-13 March 2022 | $450,000 | Eli Kassis | 229 |
2021-22 | New Capenna Championship | Online | N/A | Standard†, Historic, played on MTG Arena | 20-22 May 2022 | $450,000 | Jan-Moritz Merkel | 223 |
2022-23 | Arena Championship 1 | Online | N/A | Alchemy†, Booster Draft, played on MTG Arena | 24-26 September 2022 | $200,000 | Sam Rolph | 32 |
2022-23 | Pro Tour Phyrexia | Philadelphia | United States | Pioneer†, Booster Draft | 17-19 February 2023 | $500,000 | Reid Duke | 218 |
2022-23 | Arena Championship 2 | Online | N/A | Historic†, Booster Draft, played on MTG Arena | 18-19 March 2023 | $200,000 | Hiroshi Onizuka | 31 |
2022-23 | Pro Tour March of the Machine | Minneapolis | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 5-7 May 2023 | $500,000 | Nathan Steuer | 252 |
2022-23 | Arena Championship 3 | Online | N/A | Standard†, Booster Draft, played on MTG Arena | 27-28 May 2023 | $200,000 | Benjamin Broadstone | 32 |
2022-23 | Pro Tour Lord of the Rings | Barcelona | Spain | Modern†, Booster Draft | 28-30 July 2023 | $500,000 | Jake Beardsley | 268 |
2022-23 | Arena Championship 4 | Online | N/A | Historic†, Booster Draft, played on MTG Arena | 7-8 October 2023 | $200,000 | Shinya Saito | 32 |
2024 | Pro Tour Murders at Karlov Manor | Chicago | United States | Pioneer†, Booster Draft | 23-25 February 2024 | $500,000 | Seth Manfield | 258 |
2024 | Arena Championship 5 | Online | N/A | Explorer†, Booster Draft, played on MTG Arena | 30-31 March 2024 | $200,000 | Toni Ramis Pascual | 32 |
2024 | Pro Tour Thunder Junction | Seattle | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 26-28 April 2024 | $500,000 | Yoshihiko Ikawa | 207 |
2024 | Pro Tour Modern Horizons 3 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | Modern†, Booster Draft | 28-30 June 2024 | $500,000 | Simon Nielsen | 243 |
2024 | Arena Championship 6 | Online | N/A | Historic†, Booster Draft, played on MTG Arena | 13-14 July 2024 | $200,000 | Wouter Noordzij | 32 |
2024 | Arena Championship 7 | Online | N/A | Standard†, Booster Draft, played on MTG Arena | 14-15 December 2024 | $200,000 | Keisuke Sato | 48 |
2025 | Pro Tour Aetherdrift | Chicago | United States | Standard†, Booster Draft | 21-23 February 2025 | $500,000 | TBD | TBA |
2025 | Pro Tour (TBA) | Las Vegas | United States | TBA | 20-22 June 2025 | $500,000 | TBD | TBA |
2025 | Pro Tour (TBA) | Atlanta | United States | TBA | 26-28 September 2025 | $500,000 | TBD | TBA |
Short summary of Pro Tour wins by country:
Rank | Country | Wins |
---|---|---|
1 | United States | 57 |
2 | Japan | 18 |
3 | Germany | 16 |
4 | France | 9 |
5 | Canada | 7 |
6 | Sweden | 6 |
7 | Brazil | 4 |
Norway | ||
Czech Republic | ||
Netherlands | ||
11 | Finland | 3 |
Great Britain | ||
Spain | ||
14 | Argentina | 2 |
Denmark | ||
16 | Australia | 1 |
Belgium | ||
Israel | ||
Italy | ||
Portugal | ||
Slovakia | ||
Poland |
By default, the detailed table below is sorted in descending order, first by number of PTs won, then by number of winning players, then by number of PTs hosted, and finally by alphabetical order of the country.
The totals for each of the three columns will be different from each other, for several reasons:
Country | PTs won, in chronological order | Winning players, in chronological order | PTs hosted, in chronological order | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States | 57 | New York 1996, Los Angeles 1996, Paris 1997, Chicago 1997, Mainz 1997, Los Angeles 1998, New York 1998, Seattle 1998, Los Angeles 1999, New York 1999, Washington, D.C. 1999, London 1999, Chicago 1999, Los Angeles 2000, Brussels 2000, New York 2000, Los Angeles 2001, Tokyo 2001, Osaka 2002, Houston 2002, Venice 2003, Boston 2003, Philadelphia 2005, Honolulu 2006, Geneva 2007, San Diego 2007, Kuala Lumpur 2008, Hollywood 2008, Berlin 2008, Austin 2009, Amsterdam 2010, Paris 2011, Nagoya 2011, Honolulu 2012, Montreal 2013, San Diego 2013, Atlanta 2014, Honolulu 2014, Atlanta 2016, Madrid 2016, Nashville 2017, Albuquerque 2017, Richmond 2018, Minneapolis 2018, Atlanta 2018, London 2019, Phoenix 2020, Online 3 2020, Mythic Invitational 2020, 2020 Grand Finals, Strixhaven Championships 2021, Neon Dynasty Championships 2022, Philadelphia 2023, Minneapolis 2023, Arena Championships 3 2023, Barcelona 2023, Chicago 2024 | 59 | Michael Loconto, Shawn "Hammer" Regnier, Mike Long, Randy Buehler, Matt Place, David Price, Jon Finkel (3), Brian Selden, Steven O'Mahoney-Schwartz, Casey McCarrel, Rob Dougherty, David Humpherys, Darwin Kastle, Kyle Rose, Bob Maher, Jr., Trevor Blackwell, Scott Johns, Michael Turian, Michael Pustilnik, Zvi Mowshowitz, Ken Ho, Justin Gary, Osyp Lebedowicz, William Jensen, Matt Linde, Brock Parker, Gadiel Szleifer, Mark Herberholz, Mike Hron, Chris Lachmann, Jacob Van Lunen, Charles Gindy, Luis Scott-Vargas, Brian Kibler (2), Paul Rietzl, Ben Stark, David Sharfman, Tom Martell, Craig Wescoe, Patrick Chapin, Ari Lax, Jiachen Tao, Steve Rubin, Gerry Thompson, Seth Manfield (3), Wyatt Darby, Allen Wu, Gregory Orange, Andrew Elenbogen, Eli Loveman, Corey Burkhart, William Craddock, Austin Bursavich, Sam Pardee, Eli Kassis, Reid Duke, Nathan Steuer, Benjamin Broadstone, Jake Beardsley | 77 | New York 1996, Los Angeles 1996, Columbus 1996, Seattle 1996, Atlanta 1996, Dallas 1996, Los Angeles 1997, New York 1997, Seattle 1997, Chicago 1997, Los Angeles 1998, New York 1998, Seattle 1998, Chicago 1998, Los Angeles 1999, New York 1999, Washington, D.C. 1999, Chicago 1999, Los Angeles 2000, New York 2000, New York 2000, Chicago 2000, Los Angeles 2001, New York 2001, New Orleans 2001, San Diego 2002, Boston 2002, Houston 2002, Chicago 2003, Boston 2003, New Orleans 2003, San Diego 2004, Seattle 2004, San Francisco 2004, Columbus 2004, Atlanta 2005, Philadelphia 2005, Los Angeles 2005, Honolulu 2006, Charleston 2006, San Diego 2007, New York 2007, Hollywood 2008, Memphis 2008, Honolulu 2009, Austin 2009, San Diego 2010, Philadelphia 2011, San Francisco 2011, Honolulu 2012, Seattle 2012, San Diego 2013, Atlanta 2014, Portland 2014, Honolulu 2014, Washington DC 2015, Milwaukee 2015, Atlanta 2016, Honolulu 2016, Nashville 2017, Albuquerque 2017, Richmond 2018, Minneapolis 2018, Atlanta 2018, Cleveland 2019, Las Vegas 2019 (Arena), Long Beach 2019 (Arena), Richmond 2019, Long Beach (2nd) 2019 (Arena), Phoenix 2020, Philadelphia 2023, Minneapolis 2023, Chicago 2024, Seattle 2024, Chicago 2025, Las Vegas 2025, Atlanta 2025 |
Japan | 18 | Kobe 2004, Nagoya 2005, Yokohama 2005, Prague 2006, Charleston 2006, Paris 2006, Honolulu 2009, San Francisco 2011, Milwaukee 2015, Honolulu 2016, Nagoya 2020, Online 2 2020, Online 4 2020, Innistrad Championships 2021, Arena Championships 2 2023, Arena Championships 4 2023, Seattle 2024, Arena Championships 7 2024 | 19 | Masashiro Kuroda, Shu Komuro, Katsuhiro Mori, Takuya Osawa, Tomohiro Kaji, Tomoharu Saitou, Shouta Yasooka (2), Makihito Mihara, Kazuya Mitamura, Jun'ya Iyanaga, Kazuyuki Takimura, Kenta Harane, Ryuji Murae, Akira Asahara, Yuuki Ichikawa, Hiroshi Onizuka, Shinya Saito, Yoshihiko Ikawa, Keisuke Sato | 14 | Tokyo 1999, Tokyo 2001, Osaka 2002, Yokohama 2003, Kobe 2004, Nagoya 2005, Yokohama 2005, Kobe 2006, Yokohama 2007, Kyoto 2009, Chiba 2010, Nagoya 2011, Kyoto 2017, Nagoya 2020 |
Germany | 16 | Atlanta 1996, Chicago 1998, Tokyo 1999, Chicago 2000, Barcelona 2001, New York 2001, New Orleans 2001, Boston 2002, Chicago 2003, Berlin 2003, Kobe 2006, San Diego 2010, Barcelona 2019, Players Tour Finals 2020, Kaldheim Championships 2021, New Capenna Championships 2022 | 10 | Frank Adler, Dirk Baberowski (3), Kai Budde (7), Marco Blume (2), Daniel Zink, Jan-Moritz Merkel (2), Simon Görtzen, Thoralf Severin, Kristof Prinz, Arne Huschenbeth | 3 | Mainz 1997, Berlin 2003, Berlin 2008 |
France | 9 | San Diego 2002, Columbus 2005, Atlanta 2005, Los Angeles 2005, Yokohama 2007, Valencia 2007, Kyoto 2009, Chiba 2010, Dublin 2013 | 8 | Farid Meraghni, Pierre Canali, Gabriel Nassif (2), Antoine Ruel, Guillaume Wafo-Tapa, Remi Fortier, Guillaume Matignon, Jérémy Dezani | 4 | Paris 1997, Nice 2002, Paris 2006, Paris 2011 |
Canada | 7 | Dallas 1996, New York 1997, New York 2000, Atlanta 2005, Barcelona 2012, Valencia 2014, Minneapolis 2018 | 7 | Paul McCabe, Terry Borer, Gary Wise, Gabriel Tsang, David Rood, Alexander Hayne, Shaun McLaren, Ben Hull | 3 | Toronto 2001, Montreal 2013, Vancouver 2015 |
Sweden | 6 | Columbus 1996, Yokohama 2003, New Orleans 2003, Vancouver 2015, Brussels 2020, Online 1 2020 | 5 | Olle Råde, Mattias Jorstedt, Rickard Osterberg, Joel Larsson (2), Elias Watsfeldt | 0 | none |
Norway | 4 | New York 2000, Nice 2002, Amsterdam 2004, San Diego 2004 | 3 | Sigurd Eskeland, Eivind Nitter, Nicolai Herzog (2) | 0 | none |
Brazil | 4 | Sydney 2002, San Juan 2010, Dublin 2017, Kyoto 2017 | 3 | Carlos Romão, Paulo Vitor Damo da Rosa (2), Lucas Esper Berthoud | 0 | none |
Czech Republic | 4 | Seattle 1997, Seattle 2012, Sydney 2016, Richmond 2019 | 4 | Jakub Slemr, Stanislav Cifka, Lukas Blohon, Ondřej Stráský | 1 | Prague 2006 |
Netherlands | 4 | Toronto 2001, Seattle 2004, San Francisco 2004, Arena Championships 6 2024 | 6 | Tom Van de Logt, Kamiel Cornelissen, Jeroen Remie, Jelger Wiegersma, Julien Nuijten, Wouter Noordzij | 3 | Amsterdam 2004, Amsterdam 2010, Amsterdam 2024 |
Finland | 3 | Los Angeles 1997, Rome 1998, Memphis 2008 | 2 | Tommi Hovi (2), Antti Malin | 0 | none |
United Kingdom | 3 | Cleveland 2019, Zendikar Rising Championships 2020, Arena Championships 1 2022 | 3 | Autumn Burchett, Brad Barclay, Sam Rolph | 3 | London 1999, London 2005, London 2019 |
Spain | 3 | Washington DC 2015, Long Beach 2019 (Arena), Arena Championships 5 2024 | 3 | Antonio Del Moral León, Javier Dominguez, Toni Ramis Pascual | 8 | Barcelona 2001, Valencia 2007, Barcelona 2012, Valencia 2014, Madrid 2016, Bilbao 2018, Barcelona 2019, Barcelona 2023 |
Argentina | 2 | Bilbao 2018, Las Vegas 2019 (Arena) | 2 | Luis Salvatto, Matias Leveratto | 0 | none |
Denmark | 2 | Brussels 2015, Amsterdam 2024 | 2 | Martin Dang, Simon Nielsen | 0 | none |
Australia | 1 | Seattle 1996 | 1 | Tom Chanpheng | 2 | Sydney 2002, Sydney 2016 |
Belgium | 1 | London 2005 | 1 | Geoffrey Siron | 3 | Brussels 2000, Brussels 2015, Brussels 2020 |
Israel | 1 | New York 2007 | 1 | Uri Peleg | 0 | none |
Italy | 1 | Philadelphia 2011 | 1 | Samuele Estratti | 3 | Rome 1998, Venice 2003, Rome 2009 |
Portugal | 1 | Rome 2009 | 1 | André Coimbra | 0 | none |
Slovakia | 1 | Portland 2014 | 1 | Ivan Floch | 0 | none |
Poland | 1 | Long Beach 2019 (2nd, Arena) | 1 | Piotr Głogowski | 0 | none |
Malaysia | 0 | none | 0 | none | 1 | Kuala Lumpur 2008 |
Ireland | 0 | none | 0 | none | 2 | Dublin 2013, Dublin 2017 |
Puerto Rico | 0 | none | 0 | none | 1 | San Juan 2010 |
Switzerland | 0 | none | 0 | none | 1 | Geneva 2007 |
Magic: The Gathering is a tabletop and digital collectible card game created by Richard Garfield. Released in 1993 by Wizards of the Coast, Magic was the first trading card game and had approximately fifty million players as of February 2023. Over twenty billion Magic cards were produced in the period from 2008 to 2016, during which time it grew in popularity. As of the 2022 fiscal year, Magic generates over $1 billion in revenue annually.
The Magic: The Gathering World Championships(Worlds) have been held annually since 1994. It is the most important tournament in the game of Magic: The Gathering, offering cash prizes of up to $100,000 to the winners. With the exception of the first edition, Worlds is an invitation-only event, and from 1996 to 2011 World was the last event of each Pro Tour season. The invitees were mostly top finishers from the National championships, the top-ranked players of the DCI and high-level pro players. Since 2012 the World Championships are held after the season and the most successful 16 or 24 players have been invited to the tournament.
Kai Budde, is a professional Magic: The Gathering player, who holds the record for Pro Tour victories, and for many years held the records for earnings and lifetime Pro Points. His performances earned him the nicknames "The (German) Juggernaut" and "King of the Grand Prix". Kai left the game in late 2004 to focus on his studies, and his appearances in tournaments are less frequent than in earlier years. Budde is widely considered to be one of the all-time greatest Magic: The Gathering players.
The Players Tour (PT) is a competitive international league for the Magic: The Gathering collectible card game, culminating in the World Championship. It consists of a series of tournaments held throughout the world, each requiring an invitation to participate. The Players Tour permanently replaced the Pro Tour in the 2020 season. Every PT awards a total of $250,000 in cash prizes, with $50,000 going to the winner. The Players Tour is split into three regions: Americas, Europe, and Asia-Pacific. Each region hosts three events, resulting in nine Players Tour events per season.
Mirage was the first official block structure in Magic: The Gathering. This new block structure consisted of three expansion sets and would continue for nearly two decades, finally ending with Khans of Tarkir in 2014. The new block structure also set up the precedent that the first set in the block also became the name for the entire block. Mirage block consisted of three sets: Mirage, Visions and Weatherlight.
Grands Prix (GPs) were professional Magic: The Gathering tournaments, awarding cash prizes, Pro Points and invitations to Pro Tours. They were open to all players and were usually the biggest Magic tournaments by participant count. The first Grand Prix was held on 22–23 March 1997 in Amsterdam (Netherlands). Until their cancellation, 702 Grand Prix events were held, the biggest being GP Las Vegas 2015 with 7,551 competitors, making it the biggest trading card game tournament held at the time.
Magic: The Gathering formats are various ways in which the Magic: The Gathering collectible card game can be played. Each format provides rules for deck construction and gameplay, with many confining the pool of permitted cards to those released in a specified group of Magic card sets. The Wizards Play Network, the governing body that oversees official Magic competitive play, categorizes its tournament formats into Constructed and Limited. Additionally, there are many casual formats with the Commander format being one of the most popular formats of the game.
The 1996 Pro Tour season was the first season of the Magic: The Gathering Pro Tour. At the end of 1995 Wizards of the Coast had announced the introduction of a tournament series featuring big cash prizes. Originally coined the "Black Lotus Pro Tour" the tournaments were simply called "Pro Tours" and the name was thus changed quickly. The first Pro Tour, held in New York in February 1996, was won by the American Michael Loconto. Los Angeles and Ohio were the other Pro Tours in the inaugural season along with the 1996 World Championships in Seattle. At the end of the season Olle Råde was proclaimed the first Pro Tour Player of the Year.
Owen Turtenwald is a former American professional Magic: The Gathering player. He won a number of awards during his career, notably the 2010 Vintage World Championship and 2011 and 2015-16 Player of the Year. In 2016, he was inducted into the Magic: The Gathering Hall of Fame. He was briefly a member of the Magic Pro League in 2019 before being removed following sexual harassment accusations from women in the Magic community. He has not participated in any Wizards of the Coast sanctioned Magic: The Gathering tournaments since the incident.
Gavin Verhey is a Principal Magic: The Gathering Designer at Wizards of the Coast. He has been a member of numerous Magic set Design and Development teams since joining in 2011, including Aether Revolt, Conspiracy, Conspiracy: Take the Crown, Fate Reforged, Gatecrash, From the Vault: Angels, From the Vault: Annihilation, From the Vault: Twenty, Ixalan, Kaladesh, Modern Masters 2017, Oath of the Gatewatch, and Shadows Over Innistrad, in addition to being the lead designer of Archenemy: Nicol Bolas, Commander 2017, and Battlebond. He also currently writes the weekly column Beyond the Basics on the official Magic website. Mark Rosewater considers him part of the fifth generation of Magic designers.
The Alara block is a Magic: The Gathering expert-level expansion block, consisting of the expansion sets Shards of Alara, Conflux and Alara Reborn. The Alara block focuses on multicolored cards, in particular cards with three or more colors.
Magic: The Gathering Arena or MTG Arena is a free-to-play digital collectible card game developed and published by Wizards of the Coast (WotC). The game is a digital adaption based on the Magic: The Gathering (MTG) card game, allowing players to gain cards through booster packs, in-game achievements or microtransaction purchases, and build their own decks to challenge other players. The game was released in a beta state in November 2017, and was fully released for Microsoft Windows users in September 2019, and a macOS version on June 25, 2020. Mobile device versions were released in March 2021.
Magic: The Gathering Organized Play is the worldwide program for all levels of tournaments for the trading card game Magic: The Gathering. Created in 1993 by Wizards of the Coast, the Organized Play program has grown to host some of the largest trading card game tournaments ever, with hundreds of thousands of events each year. The vast majority of events are casual gaming events hosted at local stores, however, due to a common ranking system and set of rules and policies, these events ultimately feed players into the highest levels of play.
War of the Spark is the 81st Magic: The Gathering expansion; while it is not part of a block, this set is functionally the third part of a Ravnica-focused storyline set on the plane of Ravnica. It was released on May 3, 2019. It also became available in MTG Arena on April 25, 2019.
Nathan Steuer is an American player of the card game Magic: The Gathering, and was its world champion in 2022. He was a prodigy, making the second day of a competitive tournament at the age of 12, attending high-level tournaments continuously from the age of 17, and leaving college to play Magic professionally in 2022. He was a founding member of "Team Handshake", one of the most successful competitive Magic teams, and his 2022–2023 run of tournament placements and wins is considered among the greatest of the game's history.
Jean-Emmanuel Depraz, nicknamed JiRock, is a French Magic: The Gathering player, and the 2023 World Champion.
Pascal Maynard is a Canadian Magic: The Gathering player and game store owner.