Last updated on April 16, 2026

Doubling Season | art by Chuck Lukacs
The Secrets of Strixhaven Update Bulletin contained several small rules changes and a new artifact subtype (book) but the most exciting change comes to sagas, which now gain lore counters as an intrinsic effect. This means replacement effects affect them—most notably, Doubling Season will double the counters on sagas when they enter or gain counters through other effects, allowing you to double up on chapters.
What Does This Rules Change Mean?

Urza’s Tome | Illustration by Aaron Miller
The current ruling for sagas does not allow a player to double lore counters with a Doubling Season or similar replacement effect due to a rules quirk: An “effect” is something that happens because of a spell or ability, and those effects can be replaced. But sagas receive lore counters as part of a rule; nothing about it is intrinsic to the card type.
That’s exactly what this ruling changes. An intrinsic effect is just that: an effect intrinsic to a particular card type.
For example, planeswalkers intrinsically enter the battlefield with loyalty counters. Because that counts as an effect, and not a function of the rules, planeswalkers’ loyalty abilities are affected by replacement effects. Now, that’s how sagas work!
Does the New Ruling Skip Chapters?

Terra, Magical Adept | Illustration by Clare Wong
Not unless the saga has read ahead. On a saga without read ahead, putting counters on it up to the final chapter triggers any chapter abilities up to and including that chapter.
For example, if you put two lore counters on The Eldest Reborn when it enters, then you’ll get both the discard trigger and the edict trigger. You can even resolve them in whichever order you’d like since both abilities go on the stack at the same time.

Sagas with read ahead work differently because read ahead prevents a saga’s early chapters from triggering if it has more lore counters than that chapter number (rule 702.155a).
In other words, if it enters with two lore counters, only the second chapter can trigger. It’s basically an additional restriction to ensure the mechanic works as intended, with the consequence of a card like The Cruelty of Gix not benefiting from the rules change.
Great Sagas to Pair with Doubling Season (and Some to Avoid)
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Avatar Kyoshi | Illustration by Thanh Tuan
So, the rules dictating how sagas have changed in a way that improves Doubling Season, but which sagas are worth pairing with it, and which should you avoid?
The Avatar cycle from Avatar: The Last Airbender stand out at once. With Doubling Season, these transform into their powerful backsides the turn after they enter rather than two turns down the line. The Legend of Roku benefits particularly since its abilities are great to trigger at once.

Summon: Titan becomes a notably powerful ramp spell the turn it enters since you don’t need to wait for the Splendid Reclamation effect.

The big downside to Phyrexian Scriptures is the information your opponents gain: They get a turn’s warning about the wrath, so they know to hold up protection or stop committing to the board. But with two counters? That’s (nearly) Damnation with upside.

War of the Last Alliance becomes a wonderful double tutor, though you might not get the most from the last chapter when used this way.

Since Heaven Sent only need to survive a turn to reach chapter III, it effectively becomes : Investigate four times (assuming you control Doubling Season and not another counter doubler) which is…a lot of artifacts.
While most sagas get stronger when you get two abilities instead of one, a handful of sagas suffer from this interaction. Some sagas, like Scroll of Isildur, have effects that last as long as you control the saga. Since Doubling Season shortens the time the sagas are in play, these get weaker. Some sagas are also designed such that the abilities naturally bleed into one another. For example, Firja’s Retribution gets weaker when the Angel it creates can’t tap for the second chapter’s ability, and Showdown of the Skalds basically wastes its second chapter when you spend all your mana to draw the cards. Keep an eye out for these and similar sagas when updating your decks!
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A.L. Walser
A. L. Walser – also known as nissaflamecaller online – has been playing Magic since 2009 and the release of the original Zendikar set. An avid drafter with a bit of a Vorthos streak, his favorite aspect of playing Magic comes from the act of building a deck from nothing.
