
Magic: The Gathering · masters
Wall of Wonder
Chronicles Foreign Black Border · #28 · uncommon · 1995
Creature — Wall
Listings
No active listings
From
—
Market reference
—
Current listings on The Game Traders
No active listings for this card right now.
Card facts
Quick reference for collectors and graders.
- Collector number
- 28 / 125
- Release year
- 1995
- Rarity
- uncommon
- Illustrator
- Richard Thomas
- Colors
- U
- Frame
- 1993
- Border
- black
- Finishes
- nonfoil
- Printed
- 1995-07-01
About this card
Mana cost: {2}{U}{U}
Type: Creature — Wall
Defender (This creature can't attack.) {2}{U}{U}: This creature gets +4/-4 until end of turn and can attack this turn as though it didn't have defender.
Keywords: Defender
P/T: 1/5
Tournament legality
Current legal status across competitive formats.
Frequently asked
How can I tell if my Wall of Wonder is real?
Wall of Wonder is not on our list of commonly-counterfeited cards, but counterfeits exist across every set. Check the print quality and cardstock (real cards have a distinctive blue inner core visible from the edge), the rosette pattern on the back, the security stamp on planeswalker / mythic cards from recent sets, and confirm the collector number and set code match the official Scryfall record. For high-value copies we recommend submitting to a professional grader (PSA, BGS, CGC) for tamper-evident authentication.
What is Wall of Wonder worth?
As of the latest data, there are no active listings on The Game Traders right now. Actual value depends on condition, grading, edition and printing variant — graded high-condition copies (PSA 9–10) trade at a substantial premium over raw copies.
What set is Wall of Wonder from?
Wall of Wonder is from the Magic: The Gathering set "Chronicles Foreign Black Border" in the masters series, released in 1995.
What rarity is Wall of Wonder?
Wall of Wonder is a uncommon card in the Chronicles Foreign Black Border set.
Watch on YouTube
Other Wall of Wonder printings
Same Magic: The Gathering card across other sets and rarities.








