Big, brutal, and built to anchor a lane like a thunder god should—Volibear might just be the purest expression of control Riftbound has previewed so far.
Slotted at a jaw-dropping 12-cost, this is one of the game’s most expensive plays, but you’re not paying for tempo. You’re paying to end a game.
This is not a tech piece. Volibear is a win condition.
Gameplay / Cool Mechanics
Volibear enters with 10 Might and two keywords that signal exactly what you’re in for: Shield 3 and Tank. That means this guy gets +3 Might while defending and must be targeted first in combat at his battlefield.
You don’t just put him in front of a push—you dare your opponent to swing.
But what really turns Volibear from a wall into a weapon is his passive:
“When an opponent moves to a battlefield other than mine, draw 1.”
Translation? If your opponent tries to play around him—dodging or stalling—you’re rewarded anyway. It punishes hesitation. You either go through him or let the enemy draw deeper into their win con.
That kind of choice pressure on your opponent? It’s absurdly good, especially in a format where battlefield presence is tempo.
Volibear isn’t just big. He’s a psychological anchor. Drop him and you dictate board tension from that point forward.
Visuals
The art sells everything the mechanics are doing. Volibear stands massive and silent, cloaked in Freljord-blue stormlight and rune-wrought scars. He’s not in motion—he is the weather.
The electricity framing his torso almost glows, and his posture is pure intimidation: chest out, head tilted slightly downward, eyes unreadable behind shadowed brows.
It’s an image of power that doesn’t need to move to be felt.
The backdrop’s storm-ravaged cliffs and darkened clouds only make him seem more inevitable. Like the world is holding its breath.
Pull Rate & Value Speculation
Volibear is card 158/298, flagged as a Champion Unit with what looks like the prismatic purple rarity—which means this is likely a chase-tier pull.
We haven’t seen an alt-art or overnumbered version yet, but this one’s high on the collector radar already.
If the set gets competitive, expect Volibear to carry strong value thanks to his deck-defining potential in midrange-control hybrids.
If you’re building Freljord or even hybrid-control battlefield lock decks, you’re going to want at least one copy—maybe more, if redundancy becomes key in slower metas.
Volibear is the kind of card that forces a question the second it hits the board: “You got an answer for this?” If you don’t, the game’s not going to be about you anymore.
It’s going to be about getting through him—or losing while trying.