Avatar The Last Airbender Magic: The Gathering Beginner Box at Walmart Below Market Price

Avatar The Last Airbender Magic: The Gathering Beginner Box at Walmart Below Market Price

2 Min Read

A beginner-friendly Avatar set for under $20.

By Ben Williams on April 15, 2026

All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.

TL;DR: Walmart offers the Magic: The Gathering Avatar The Last Airbender Beginner Box listed for $18.99, while Amazon sellers are starting at $23.66.

MTG’s Avatar: The Last Airbender expansion is an excellent way to start with the trading card game, available now for under $20. As of April 15, Walmart has the Magic: The Gathering Avatar The Last Airbender Beginner Box listed for $18.99, reduced from $24.39. On Amazon, the lowest current third-party listing is $23.66. TCGplayer has listings as low as $23.34, with its market price also at $23.34. Walmart’s price is nearly $5 cheaper than both Amazon’s lowest available price and TCGplayer’s market value.

The Beginner Box is designed as a perfect learn-to-play entry point to Magic: The Gathering, featuring two 20-card tutorial decks based on Aang and Zuko, along with eight additional 20-card themed half-decks that can be mixed into full 40-card decks. It includes two playmats or playboards, two Spindown life counters, two learn-to-play guides, five double-sided tokens, and a rules reference booklet.

Created for two players, you can either have a friendly MTG player teach you the game, or you can both learn together. You can still grab the Magic: The Gathering Avatar The Last Airbender Play Booster Box for around $120. Elsewhere, the Lorwyn Eclipsed Play Booster Box is available to buy for under $110.

Ben Williams is a freelance writer at Mashable, joining the team in June 2025. With over 10 years of experience in gaming, tech, TV, anime, and film, he has covered an extensive range of topics. Aside from contributions to Mashable, Ben has worked with IGN, Radio Times, Eurogamer, UNILAD Tech, and Rock Paper Shotgun, among others. When not writing, he enjoys playing and watching games, films, and shows he loves covering.

You might also like