Dungeons & Dragons Playtests Four New Mystic-Themed Subclasses

All four are brand-new subclasses.
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Dungeons & Dragons has dropped their first Unearthed Arcana playtest of 2026, with four brand-new subclasses being tested. Today, Wizards of the Coast posted a Mystic Subclasses Unearthed Arcana playtest to D&D Beyond, featuring four magic-themed subclasses. The new subclasses include the Warrior of the Mystic Arts Monk subclass, the Oath of the Spellguard Paladin subclass, the Magic Stealer Rogue subclass and the Vestige Patron Warlock subclass.

The Warrior of the Mystic Arts is a spellcasting subclass that grants Monks the ability to cast Sorcerer spells up to 4th level spells. The Oath of the Spellguard is designed with protecting magic-casters in mind, while the Magic Stealer Rogue targets spellcasting and can empower their Sneak Attacks with magic stolen from nearby spellcasters. The Vestige Patron Warlock forms a bond with a dying god, with the god taking on a vestige form as a companion. The Vestige companion grows in power with the spellcaster. Notably, the Vestige Patron draws inspiration from the Binder from past editions of D&D.

There's no indication when or what this new Unearthed Arcana could be related to. There are several Unearthed Arcanas not currently attached to an announced D&D product, although two almost are certainly tied to a Dark Sun sourcebook.

You can check out the subclasses here. Feedback opens for the playtest on January 22nd.
 

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Christian Hoffer

Christian Hoffer


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I love the flavour of the Spellguard Paladin. I've been trying to figure out where the Swordmage really fits in 5e for a long time. There are arcane gish characters, sure – I especially like the Battle Smith and Armorer Artificers for a purely arcane take on this. But the Swordmage often felt like it was trying to either be a Paladin but Arcane or a Ranger but Arcane.

Oath of the Watchers, and more recently Oath of the Noble Genies, shows that Paladins can inhabit arcane gishy territory just as Artificers, Bards, Fighters, Rogues, Warlocks, and Wizards can. This lets us explore a very Paladin-esque but Arcane societies style knightly protector of Mages (as well as protector against Mages). Spellguard also is not just a ref to the Spellguard Shield, but also to the Spellguards of Silverymoon.

I'd love to see an Arcane-esque Ranger subclass as well that embodies the more witchhunter/arcane hunter / Aegis of Ensnaring style of Arcane gish, maybe even in a reworking of the Monster Slayer subclass, but I love the narrative space that Paladin gives to this archetype.

If it walks like a Paladin, and it quacks like a Paladin, but it wants Wizard spells not Cleric… then maybe it's a Paladin with a few key Wizard spells added to the spel list.

I also think this type of Arcane Gish fits more with the Str/Cha than the Str/Int Armorer & Battle Smith – those are emphasizing a different type of the story. This is almost more like the warrior who serves the Magic School and picked up magic along the way (that feels less cerebral and more sorcerous).

The Spellthief in all but name baffles me, because WotC's already used the name for the capstone feature of the Arcane Trickster. I get that this is sort of like, what if instead of 1/3 castery Wizard spells, we do clearly magical but specialized abilities a la Arcane Archer and Rune Knight Fighters? That's fine. Even the idea of really fleshing out the stealing magic is fine. But in a landscape where Arcane Trickster is literally the Magic Thief // Spell Thief // Phantom Thief // Lupin // Dark Mousy tropes, how is the Magic Stealer unique? I almost wish that you have given Arcane Trickster a different capstone so that you weren't dabbling in archetypal spaces when you wanted to go more all in on stealing magic.

That all said, I could also see the Magic Stealer as a red herring, instead being a tyle of Defiler-Magic Rogue for Dark Sun, with a different final name. But as it stands, there's just no narrative space for a Spellthief in an environment with Arcane Trickster already embodying the Spell Thief.WotC, you need to prove to us why this Roguish Archetype is not just a variant of Arcane Trickster. Rune Knight and Arcane Archer figured out their differences. Even the Cavalier shown in Unearthed Arcana in October 2025 lays out a very clearly different version of a Courtly Knight from that of the revised Banneret, the Battle Master, and the old Samurai. These subclasses were all stepping on each other's narrative toes, but now I really get a sense of how they embody different spaces.I believe you can do this with the Rogue too, but this pass on it just lacks inspiration.

Master of the Mystic Arts Monk is a fascinating take on Wong and Shang-Chi and Doctor Strange, etc from the MCU – this halfway between Wuxia and Sorcery tropes. I'm in for it. That said, I still think it's crazy that we haven't had a similar Monk that does 1/3rd Cleric spells. I also think it's very risky to use the Sorcerer spell list instead of the Cleric/Druid/Wizard lists – those three lists are more balanced for multiclassing, gish subclasses, and magic initiate feat takers, while the Sorcerer like the Artificer, Bard, Paladin, Psion, Ranger, and Warlock, use very very specialized spell-lists that don't necessarily balance with other classes pilfering from their lists.

Vestige Pact Warlock is a narrative space I've been begging for since 2014, as it was a very prominent O-Warlock build in 4e, was a fascinating class in late 3.5e's Tome of Magic, and had a separate Warlock subclass take on it in Essentials (the Binder, from Heroes of Shadow onward). I'm not sure I love this version. I kinda prefer the idea of either you're drawing on the power of a dead god like Atropus floating in the Astral Sea, or else you're making various small pacts with vestige entities that when summoned do different things (kinda more like a Final Fantasy or Golden Sun Summoner). This feels instead like a Warlock Pet subclass, and I'm not sure it hits the sweet spot of what made Binders and Vestige-Pact Warlocks feel so awesome.

I will say as much as I love this new Warlock so much, my favourite by far of this set of subclasses, its no replacement for a new Binder class in the vein of the 3.5e original.

What made the OG Binder so cool was the subtle horror and creepiness of the class compared to anything else, it had this psychological and body horror to it that the 4e & 5e Vestigelock simply doesn't have and can't reproduce.

So I except this new Vestigelock for what it is, but it replaces Binders no more then the new Monk subclass replaces Sorcerer class.
 

The more I think about about the Mystic Arts Monk the more I like it, assuming they fix what I assume is a broken capstone.

Just adding Blade Ward and a blade cantrip is really strong. It's really easy for Monks to disengage so Booming Blade riders will be trivial to trigger. Similarly, Cacophonic Shield is a Sorcerer spell and disengage + Monk speed means you can tag every single enemy with it while boosting your ranged defense.

The Focus point to spell slot exchange is really good. You can pump your Focus points so you can use them constantly, but also every time you’ve got a spare hour you can dump any extra Focus points back into slots at literally no cost. Short rest resources recharging long rest ones is super versatile if you plan even a little.
And maybe an additional feature at level 3.
 

The Spellthief in all but name baffles me, because WotC's already used the name for the capstone feature of the Arcane Trickster. I get that this is sort of like, what if instead of 1/3 castery Wizard spells, we do clearly magical but specialized abilities a la Arcane Archer and Rune Knight Fighters? That's fine.
Seeing the Magic Stealer as a way to amp up the Arcane Archer is actually quite clever, especially if you allow one's own spells to count. (They do RAW now, but that might not survive). Getting extra damage dice on an arrow with SA after a spell is cast would be fun, and it's not something that needs more levels in Rogue: it is not an ability that scales, and so you can go for extra attack through another class and increase the chances of using it.

Cool.
Even the idea of really fleshing out the stealing magic is fine. But in a landscape where Arcane Trickster is literally the Magic Thief // Spell Thief // Phantom Thief // Lupin // Dark Mousy tropes, how is the Magic Stealer unique?
For me, the Arcane Archer view might be the answer to this.

Master of the Mystic Arts Monk is a fascinating take on Wong and Shang-Chi and Doctor Strange, etc from the MCU – this halfway between Wuxia and Sorcery tropes. I'm in for it. That said, I still think it's crazy that we haven't had a similar Monk that does 1/3rd Cleric spells. I also think it's very risky to use the Sorcerer spell list instead of the Cleric/Druid/Wizard lists – those three lists are more balanced for multiclassing, gish subclasses, and magic initiate feat takers, while the Sorcerer like the Artificer, Bard, Paladin, Psion, Ranger, and Warlock, use very very specialized spell-lists that don't necessarily balance with other classes pilfering from their lists.
By choosing the Sorcerer list, they are making sure that you take attack spells. The Sorcerer doesn't have anything meaningful that the Wizard doesn't, but Wizard has a lot more broad utility, and keeping the monk away from that seems to be the intent.

I suspect there would be no issue subbing in Cleric or Bard or Druid if a player wanted. (I wanted exactly this when they were playtesting the Sorcerer -- the option to use a range of spell lists. I still think it's viable.)
 

What if a player chooses a "spellthief" but the DMs uses enemies without magic powers? Or the boss was a "class" with special game mechanics like psionic or incarnum soulmelds.
 


That is what I figured, I just find it excessively cautious, and unneeded. There is no list that breaks the Warlock.
It’s possible that in the future a cleric subclass might get a spell list that works in a different way, in exchange for being weak in terms of other subclass features. E.g. instead of fixed spells you get to pick one on the fly.

It’s unlikely, but it should be taken into consideration. You might specify the format of eligible spell lists to future proof it. Something like: "any cleric domain list with two level 1 and level 2 spells at level 3, two level 3 spells at level 5, two level 4 spells at level 7 and two level 5 spells at level 9".
 
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