Ranking the Best Mounts in Magic: The Gathering

Let’s just forget about dragons and demons for a moment and focus on creatures that are probably left behind in most plays. We are talking about mounts. When it comes to mounts, one thing is for sure: there are plenty of different ones in Magic: The Gathering.

Most of them have a supportive role, but that doesn’t mean that they don’t bring any advantage to the game. In most cases, they are essential in your deck-building strategy.

But the question is, which are the best? Well, there are no “best mounts” since they all have different abilities and can be used in many ways.

Let’s highlight the best mounts in Magic: The Gathering.

The Gitrog, Ravenous Ride

This is a huge frog, and kind of scary looking since there is an arm hanging out of its mouth. If you played during the original Gitrog Monster era, you already know the frog is chaos incarnate. The new version in Outlaws of Thunder Junction is a bit different, though.

But can this creature be considered a month? Well, kind of. The newer version is a 6/5 with trample and Saddle 1, which means that.

Calamity, Galloping Inferno

Finally, we have a proper mount, and what other than a horse, right? There are many different horses in Magic: The Gathering, that’s for sure.

But don’t get too excited. Yes, these horses are fast, but that’s not why they are brilliant. I once started collecting all the horses in MTG, but don’t mind me, I’m a horse racing fan. The point is that the game will definitely inspire you to look at some steeds. After a while, you’ll be tuning in on the next big horse race. But if you are hyped to place a show bet, make sure to learn what it means at twinspires.com/edge/racing/betting-info/horse-racing/show-bet/.

Let’s go back to MTG. This is a six-mana 4/6 elemental horse that lives up to the chaos of its name. When it attacks while addled, you choose a nonlegendary creature that saddled it and double it, which creates a copy that’s tapped, attacking, and then sacrificed. You can do this twice.

What does it mean? Well, it means that you can saddle a powerful creature like Sheoldred or Titan of Industry, and get a free attacking copy.

Seraphic Steed

Here we have another horse, the Serephic Steed, which is actually a unicorn.

This is a great mount, especially if you are more into elegance than brute-force chaos. This is a 2/2 Unicorn mount for just two mana (green and white), with first strike and lifelink. So, we are talking about a solid card.

But when you saddle it, you create a 3/3 flying Angel token with vigilance.

Bounding Felidar

There’s nothing subtle here: a 4/7 cat-beast Mount for six mana with Saddle 2. Whenever it attacks while saddled, all your other creatures get +1/+1 counters, and you even gain some life. It’s straightforward, powerful, and great in go-wide or midrange decks.

This is a single card that buffs your entire squad, survives attacks, and helps stabilize games.

Bridled Bighorn

This 3/4 sheep Mount with vigilance costs four mana and has Saddle 2. Saddled and attacking? You get a 1/1 Sheep token. It’s a simple value engine that’s actually quite solid in aggressive token decks where every creature counts.

Why is it great?  It pressure builds both from the Mount itself and extra tokens, solid over multiple turns.

Congregation Gryff

At five mana, you get a 1/4 flyer with Saddle 3. While not explosive, its lifegain and evasion make it surprisingly useful in slower games or draft pools where every point of damage matters.

Why people draft it: stabilizes life totals and provides a flying threat — great in formats where efficiency matters.

Trained Arynx

A green Mount with Saddle 2, 2/2 body, and scry 1 on entry. It was so draft-finisher-worthy that it often defined GW Mount archetypes in Limited formats, a consistent early play that sets up curve-followers nicely.

Archmage’s Newt & Caustic Bronco (Bonus Pair)

These mirror-themed rares share Saddle 3 and deliver powerful effects:

  • Archmage’s Newt lets you cast spells with flashback from your graveyard when saddled — handy for value/control decks.

  • Caustic Bronco acts like a reversed Dark Confidant: you reveal the top card, and opponents lose life equal to its value if it’s saddled (otherwise, you lose life).

They’re less Mounty in flavor (no horses!) but provide mirror-play anchors with real synergy.

Final Thoughts

So, mounts in OTJ aren’t just there for a showcase. They are quite versatile, flavorful, and can bring you a serious in-game advantage. These mounts can bring you anything from explosive token copies to board-wide buffs, and the best thing is that they are versatile, meaning that they can be used for various playstyles.

The question is, which is your favorite? Let us know.