I loved ATLA growing up, and it seems it was treated well by MTG. Pre-release and drafting it has been really fun (firebending is rad). Draft is my favorite way to play and I REALLY am looking forward to Lorwyn Eclipsed. The art and lore are so sweet. And the transforming cards seem like they'll be fun. My fingers are crossed that it's a mechanically fun set for limited.
My only complaint (and for me, it's a big one) is that with so many sets, it feels like I barely get to learn the set before the next one comes out. I would love to feel like I got my fill with a set and had to wait a bit for the next, rather than wondering if I'll ever get to draft it again after less than two months. Lorwyn releases Jan 23, and then TMNT releases Mar 6th... So if I made every draft night at my LGS, that'd be 6 drafts. Not even every color pair.
I was busy with work, traveling, and guests during Edge of Eternities and I literally didn't get to draft it at all. I know there'll be flashbacks on Arena and maybe I could even host my own draft night - but how will I even know if I liked a set enough to go through the effort if I barely got to play it in the first place?
As a drafter, I don't feel like I need constant new sets to draw me in. I just want to experience all (or just more) of a set. I might try making a set cube of Lorwyn or something. It'd help a lot if my LGS didn't draft UB sets... If we were still on Edge right now, that'd be sweet.
I guess I have product fatigue. Keeping up with the current set feels like a chore. Every universe-within set that comes out has me hyped, and then it's gone in a few weeks. And it feels like some UB sets got more love/attention in their design, which sucks. I just want to draft on weekends when I'm free without feeling like I'm constantly trying to learn the new set and experience it before it's gone.
The Avatar set has at least solidified the idea to me that UB can just get fantastic.
I was 100% opposed to Magic Fortnite when it was announced, but it, like the rest of the game, has high peaks and low lows.