Two of the scariest things inMagic: The Gatheringare powerful enter the battlefield triggers, and an overwhelming swarm of tokens. Many decks rely on both of these to win, and, thanks to the offspring mechanic introduced in Bloomburrow, you’re able to do both at the same time.

Offspring is similar to lots of other mechanics in Magic, but the way it could be used could make it an all-timer for the game. Breed like Rabbits, swarm the board, and drown your opponent in value with offspring.

Fleetfoot Swordmaster by Aaron Miller

What Is Offspring?

Introduced in 2024’s Bloomburrow, offspring isan additional cost found on creature spells. Much likekicker, and the many mechanics that are just kicker with a different name, you can pay the offspring on top of what you paid to cast it.

If you do, when the creature spell resolves and the creature enters the battlefield, it thenmakes a 1/1 token copy of itself. This token copies everything its ‘parent’ has inherent to it, with the only difference being the power and toughness.

Thundertrap Trainer by Matthew Stewart

The offspring token only copies the inherent copyable values of the parent. This means what is printed on the card is copied, but effects, buffs, and additional types given to the parent between it entering and it making the token won’t.

Paying the offspring cost happensat the same time as casting the spell: as it’s being put on the stack, before it resolves. You canonly pay offspring once, unlike the similar squad mechanic that lets you pay multiple times. If the spell is countered, you won’t make a token.

How To Use Offspring

A 1/1token copyof a creature doesn’t sound like it’d have a big impact, but offspring can be a terrifying mechanic if used the right way.

For starters, anygo-wide deckslove offspring, as the low cost for a small creature fits perfectly in their strategies.Mono-red aggro and white weenie decksin particular like lots of small creatures, but the offspring costs are often low enough for them to fit into just about any deck.

But, more importantly, offspring is a great way to double up on enter triggers. If a creature has both offspring and a triggered ability that goes off when it enters the battlefield,the token copy will have the same abilitywhen it enters. For instance, if you give a Sun Titan offspring, you could return two permanents from your graveyard to the battlefield.

Making the 1/1 token copy isa triggered abilitythat happens when the parent creature enters the battlefield. This means it can be copied by effects likeRoaming Throne and Panharmonicon, netting you two copies for the price of one.

It’s important to remember that offspring is paid when the creature is cast, not when it enters the battlefield. Blinking or otherwise cheating a creature with offspring into play willcompletely skip the timeyou can pay for the token copy.

Finally,populateis your best friend. Populate makes a copy of an existing token, letting you take that 1/1 copy and turning it into three, four, or even more of them with minimal work. Considering both offspring and populate are most commonly found ingreen and white, putting them together could be powerful.

The Best Cards With Offspring

Though they themselves don’t have offspring,Zinnia, Valley’s Voicefrom the Bloomburrow Family Matters Commander deck is perhaps the best card for the mechanic, as it gives every creature you cast an offspring cost of two generic mana. Creatures with offspring are balanced with it in mind, but the same can’t be said for creatures that normally lack offspring.

Being able to make copies of any creature you play could set you up for some really powerful board states and tons of value from enter triggers.

As for creatures with offspring, three worth looking at areWarren Warleader, Tender Wildguide, and Thundertrap Trainer: