The Dark was Resistance to the Satanic Panic

Jesper Myrfors Reveals MTG’s The Dark Was a Cultural Clapback

Magic: The Gathering has always carried a certain mystique, but one of its most famous expansions, The Dark (1994), wasn’t just about fantasy flavor. Nay, nay! According to original art director the set was deliberately designed as a pushback against the “Satanic Panic” that swept through American culture in the late ’80s and early ’90s.

Satanic Panic and Tabletop Games

The “Satanic Panic” was a moral crusade that painted tabletop games, heavy metal, and anything remotely occult‑themed as dangerous gateways to corruption. Magic, with its demons, pentagrams, and dark fantasy art, became an easy target. Parents and conservative groups accused the game of promoting witchcraft and evil, despite its mechanics being closer to chess than ritual.

The Dark’s Statement

Jesper Myrfors, Magic’s original art director, revealed that The Dark was intentionally crafted as a protest. He was “really tired of the judgmental, holier‑than‑thou attitude coming from a lot of conservative so‑called Christians,” and wanted the set to reflect that frustration. The cards leaned into grim imagery—graveyards, cults, and shadowy figures—not to glorify evil, but to confront the hysteria head‑on.

Polygon notes that The Dark arrived just as Magic was exploding in popularity, making it one of the most visible counterpoints to the panic. Its art and themes didn’t shy away from controversy; instead, they challenged the idea that fantasy storytelling was something to fear.

Legacy: Resistance Through Fantasy

Three decades later, The Dark is remembered not only for its mechanics but for its cultural stance. It showed that Magic wasn’t going to sanitize itself to appease moral watchdogs. Instead, it leaned into its identity as a game of imagination, symbolism, and conflict. This game continued to accomplish its job of showing that a simple game can be a huge for of resistance. That art can push back against judgment and censorship.

MTG’s Cultural Clapback

Magic: The Gathering’s The Dark was a huge cultural clapback. In the middle of a moral panic, Wizards of the Coast chose to double down on its vision, turning a card set into a quiet act of defiance. Thirty‑one years later, its message still resonates: fantasy isn’t dangerous—it’s a mirror, and sometimes that mirror reflects the absurdity of fear itself.

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