Malcolm will bring the Mycotyrant there with him. At the last paragraph of Ixalan story, "someone" has been infected, but only visible symptoms were eyes, hidden behind googles...
A new body stood on the deck of a ship—such useful things, ships—and watched as it approached High and Dry. This one retained its original form in most ways, except for its eyes, covered by dark lenses. Better to hide, and plan, and spread.
we got a playmat of that collector box we see even more now
Looks like kiora, samut, nahiri, sarkhan, nissa, and Ob Nixilis (again) is gonna lose their sparks.
are consequence is looking like many walkers are gonna losing their sparks. Planeswalkers are probably gonna be reduced servilely in sets. Might further increase the theory of going back to weatherlight style heroes and mutiverse travel for non walkers might be lighting up.
Well, in upper left corner, there seems to be
the Weatherlight. And Nashi (lower right) is good with vehicles, so...
I think they still can write a decent stories (books) even nowadays, but better no be tied to actual card set.
Examples:
Django Wrexler: The Gathering Storm (prequel for War of the Spark) - the Niv-Mizzet vs Bolas fight is brilliant
Kate Elliott: Chronicles of Bolas (loosely tied to Core Set 2019)
Kate Elliott: The Wildered Quest (Eldraine book)
Brandon Sanderson: Children of the Nameless (Innistrad spinoff book)
I think when authors have greater freedom, they could make a nice piece. However, when they have strict boundaries of action, heroes, and quota of 5 chapters, it usually goes wrong...
I don't quite get why we see such a disproportionate amount of Strixhaven students. It seems like an odd choice to throw students at the greatest conflict in MtG yet. Especially Zimone who is the youngest of them. Both in universe and out of it.
Maybe Strixhaven is going to be particularly relevant? Maybe they'll make their last stand there?
There is the Biblioplex - if it's a library with basically everything written that happened and is happening in Multiverse (and maybe there is a restricted section with books describing what may happen... well, truly familiar ground for student "types" like Zimone and Quintorius.
...
Also, I don't think I've ever seen anyone play Defend the Celestus period. If someone found a niche home for it, I say let them have their fun.
I play it in my werewolf deck usually as a combat surprise.
And this particularly I'm seeing a lot in unranked:
Turn 1 Forest + Rotpriest
Turn 2 Forest + second Rotpriest (or March of Burgeoning Life -> second Priest), green mana open for Tamiyo/Tyvar's "safekeeping"
Turn 4 Defend the Celestus - get from 6 to 12 poison counters, and cannot be responded to (countering/destroying won't help)
Maybe my unranked decks have similar matchmaking weight to Rotpriests...
I have quite different experience.
I am playing only unranked, and face them several times a day, either blue-green with Ivy, or mono green with Defend the Celestus.
They should ban it at least in Bo1, or ban it and replace with alchemy version: "Whenever a creature you control becomes the target of a spell an opponent controls, target opponent gets a poison counter."
I am asking honestly, because I really don't know why. She's basically "exile target creature" or "combat trick that will save you a blocker/attacker" for 2WW.
On the other hand, both of them are Chris Rallis' art, so maybe it's just advertisement
Well, in upper left corner, there seems to be
Examples:
Django Wrexler: The Gathering Storm (prequel for War of the Spark) - the Niv-Mizzet vs Bolas fight is brilliant
Kate Elliott: Chronicles of Bolas (loosely tied to Core Set 2019)
Kate Elliott: The Wildered Quest (Eldraine book)
Brandon Sanderson: Children of the Nameless (Innistrad spinoff book)
I think when authors have greater freedom, they could make a nice piece. However, when they have strict boundaries of action, heroes, and quota of 5 chapters, it usually goes wrong...
I play it in my werewolf deck usually as a combat surprise.
And this particularly I'm seeing a lot in unranked:
Turn 1 Forest + Rotpriest
Turn 2 Forest + second Rotpriest (or March of Burgeoning Life -> second Priest), green mana open for Tamiyo/Tyvar's "safekeeping"
Turn 4 Defend the Celestus - get from 6 to 12 poison counters, and cannot be responded to (countering/destroying won't help)
Maybe my unranked decks have similar matchmaking weight to Rotpriests...
I am playing only unranked, and face them several times a day, either blue-green with Ivy, or mono green with Defend the Celestus.
They should ban it at least in Bo1, or ban it and replace with alchemy version: "Whenever a creature you control becomes the target of a spell an opponent controls, target opponent gets a poison counter."
I am asking honestly, because I really don't know why. She's basically "exile target creature" or "combat trick that will save you a blocker/attacker" for 2WW.
In Arena, I had much more harder time against Grand Master of Flowers or Lolth, Spider Queen, and currently have troubles against Wrenn and Seven...
But maybe I am just unskilled player.
264. Bloodfell Caves
265. Blossoming Sands
(266. Boseiju)
267. Dismal Backwater
(268. Eiganjo)
269. Jungle Hollow
273. Rugged Highlands
274. Scoured Barrens
(275. Secluded Courtyard)
(276. Sokenzan)
277. Swiftwater Cliffs
(278. Takenuma)
279-280. Thornwood Falls
280-281. Tranquil Cove
281-282. Wind-Scarred Crag
Among the last four there would probably be Terramorphic Expanse or Unknown Shores...
"Alas, poor Yorick! I compleated him, Horatio."
Sorry, couldn't resist
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