I would like to see a junky combo of Demonlord Belzenlok with Eureka or something. Protect your combo with FoWs and Foil... all cards with cmc 4+.
Or we can just use Griselbrand instead
Yeah - that was my suspicion - it's just mana flare's initial wording that made it seem that it was like mana reflection.
And for the Eldrazi Comment, mainly because its an additional card to use against Storm/Elves, the latter of which I had a problem with last time I played with eldrazi.
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Edit:
Powerstone Shard 3
Artifact
T: Add C for each artifact you control named Powerstone Shard.
Not better than cloudpost engines, but IDK, could get fun with:
Phyrexian Metamorph
Sculpting Steel
Cogwork Assembler
Saheeli Rai
Copy Artifact
Last edited by Cire; 03-09-2018 at 03:52 PM.
This set looks really fun to me. It's been a while since I've considered some (non-cube) limited formats and I think I actually might. Good on WotC for making a cycle of triple-mono color casting cost big creatures. I've always thought that'd be a fun way to make people commit to manabases and not just get to run all the good stuff in whatever 3 colors they play.
Stabilization Orb is pretty great against literally all the decks I hate to face in modern so I'm gonna go ahead and pick up a playset even if it isn't really necessary. Fuck Tron/Eldrazi/Krark-Clan/Eggs decks (the latter 2 since I cannot enjoy watching my opponent take a 10 min turn).
This set actually looks pretty cool so far.
Some interesting stuff in the spoiler.
Sagas are probably the highlight from a design standpoint. They are essentially huge Sorceries whose effects are spread out over multiple turns. This gives them a bit more wiggle-room in terms of costing the effect, and the fact that they're Enchantments allows a lot more colors means of interacting with them. From a flavor perspective they tell a story as counters accumulate and the effects change; framing them as pivotal events in Magic history is really neat. Great stuff, would want and expect nothing less from a set with Garfield onboard.
Tribal subtheme looks good. Partially, because the tribes chosen are less parasitic (Wizards, Knights, and MOTHERFUCKIN' GOBLINS), so to speak, but also because they hit on the classic fantasy at the roots of MTG.
Verdicts out on the Legendary matters theme as a whole, but a lot of the supertyped cards themselves look great. It's taken decades, but in this one set are two, yes TWO, R/W Legendary critters that offer an EDH buildaround that isn't "lol turn d00dz sideways!!!!1111!11!". Not to mention there are tons of callbacks and references to characters of old with flavorful, evocative designs.
Did I mention Goblins are back, including Siege-Gang Commander and Goblin Warchief in Standard? I might show up to a Standard event just to run out the old Scourge boyz.
Legendary Spells are probably the biggest apparent miss. It just feels like clunky design that's neither flavorful nor particularly interesting. Why does having Jace in play let me cast Urza's Sylex Blast or Jaya's Burnination? Furthermore, why can I cast these amazing spells two or more times in one game? I thought they were Legendary? It seems like a missed opportunity to make powerful spells with a serious drawback that isn't just being forced to play WotC's two favorite card types.
Art and story remain to seen, but I'm not optimistic on this front. Technically sound, but over-directed and focus-grouped art will likely dominate because it sells, I guess. Story will probably be Jaya, Teferi, and the Weatherlight swearing allegiance to the Jacetice League to fight Saturday Morning Cartoon Bolas in Ravnica 3: The Financial Slam Dunk. The new border for Legendary Creatures could be decent like Kaladesh Inventions and Ixalan Flip-Lands or hot fucking garbage like everything else they've tried.
All-in-all, not bad. I've come to grips with the fact that MTG is never going to be what it was in the past; it's too corporate now, shit's just about selling focus-tested "safe" mediocrity. And the games too well-trod to have the creative of the early 90's golden age. But this looks alright, a decent middle ground between grognards and mass audience.
I think legwndary spells should be way more powerful, since you need to have a board to cast those. But would start the "break standard" cry.
Thist is the block to have Sanctuary ruins, a white enchantment version of Academy Ruins... man, this would bring so many nice Loam/enchantress builds.
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I wonder if there are going to any applications for Hex Parasite in combination with the Saga enchantments. Those interactions are most likely not Legacy-tier, but one or the other might find its way in Modern. The best effects for this from the known Saga enchantments so far are:
- Fall of the Thran : I — Destroy all lands.
- Phyrexian Scriptures : II — Destroy all nonartifact creatures.
- The Flame of Keld : II — Draw two cards.
The Flame of Keld interaction is probably the best one as it keeps giving you a stream of new cards relatively cheap, but being vulnerable to AD and initially forcing you to discard your hand isn't so hot.
What has Grapeshot have to do with it?
And Flame of Keld can only upgrade the damage once since it immediately gets sacrificed as a state-based effect once it's ability leaves the stack:
Once the number of lore counters on a Saga is greater than or equal to the greatest number among its chapter abilities—in the Dominaria set, this is always three—the Saga's controller sacrifices it as soon as its chapter ability has left the stack, most likely by resolving or being countered. This state-based action doesn't use the stack.
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