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What if there was no such thing as blue? There are five colors in Magic, and these colors make up the color pie. So what would happen if one of them was eliminated?
Card draw, counterspells, flying and flash are all a big part of the game, so we can't just get rid of them entirely. We'd need to give them to the other colors. So without further ado, let's move into the fictional Zendikar previews, but without blue in the midst...
Card draw, counterspells, flying and flash are all a big part of the game, so we can't just get rid of them entirely. We'd need to give them to the other colors. So without further ado, let's move into the fictional Zendikar previews, but without blue in the midst...
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Welcome to Zendikar Preview Week on mtgsalivanth.blogspot.com! We've already shown you Kicker, Trap and Landfall on the site, so let's have a look at some more generic cards.
Our first card is one you've all seen before, so let's show you it before we get to the good stuff:
Our next card came from something we figured we needed in Red: decent card draw. Drawing two cards for four mana in M10 simply wasn't enough to let Red keep up with the other three colors. Even Green had better card draw than Red with Harmonize. So we made a card that we feel really symbolises Red's flavour: if you're willing to go all-out, you'll receive a pretty neat reward.
Check out Burning Inspiration:
This card is pretty good in Draft if you draft the right deck to make use of it, and it'll probably see play in Constructed too. Could this push Red Deck Wins into the top decks?
The next card to show you has an interesting design story. R&D wanted to make a red counterspell, since it's hardly fair for Red to miss out when everyone else gets a cut, but counterspells aren't exactly random. We tried with different variations, like "Counter target spell with an odd converted mana cost", but eventually we figured out what was wrong.
We were coming at the problem from the wrong angle. Being able to play the card was pretty random, but what we wanted were the kind of cards where when you PLAYED the spell, you didn't know what would happen. Of course, that was weak in a counterspell, so we decided to give Red a helping hand with counterspells, without quite giving it the same level as the other colors.
I think the solution we came up with is a good one. Let's give a warm welcome to Chaos Swerve.
The templating here is pretty confusing, so let me explain. A spell is only a spell while it's on the stack. Once it's off the stack, if it's not a permanent, it leaves the stack and goes to the graveyard, and if it is, it becomes that permanent type. So essentially, we have a card that counters a card half the time, but if you counter a counterspell with it, it will always counter the spell. So we have, rather unusually, an anti-counterspell counterspell: a great way of letting Red fight counterspells without giving it the same level as White or Black, the primary counterspell colors (Green, of course, only getting counterspells to protect itself and it's permanents).
The next card to show you is a multi-color card. Multicolor will only show up on a few cards in Zendikar, but the ones we have are quite good. Here, we originally had the following card:
4GW
Instant
Counter target spell. You may put X +1/+1 counters on target creature, where X was it's converted mana cost.
However, this card felt too much like Draining Specter from Time Spiral, which essentially did the same thing in mono-black.
So we decided: What if we made an 'either-or' card rather than a 'both' card?
This led to Managrowth:
Managrowth will often go one way or the other, but it can lead to good 'Magic stories' when your opponent makes the wrong choice. All in all, it's a fairly elegant design.
The next card came from a need to make mono-green a bit more powerful. Mono-green by definition has a hard time dealing with creatures, but it is the master of Flash and of Deathtouch, so when you combine them you get a strong card, as evident in Winged Coatl, the 1GW card from Alara Reborn. But it wasn't quite enough: so we decided to make a better one.
Winged Coatl 2.0 is here: Venomweb Spider.
And now it's time for the last one. We've deliberately saved the best for last: Mind Crush is certain to become one of the power cards in the set. Rather than set it up, we'll just show you this powerful counterspell:
So now you have it folks: some of the goodies from Zendikar. We've got more next week as we discuss the design of the Trap mechanic, why we brought back Kicker, and more. We'll also have a couple of preview cards for you, so be sure to tune in.
Until next time, may the answer to your problems be elegant.
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Well, I certainly hope you found that interesting (and I hope I didn't butcher your writing style TOO badly MaRo, if you're reading this). Remember: if you liked this post, be sure to tell me on Twitter or via the comments, and I'll do some more every couple of weeks.
Until next time, may you explore the hypothetical.
hi
ReplyDeletewell you know, I don't be a great advocate advocate of the blue color in magic, however I can't denied the great need of this color to the excellent working of certain decks, for example I constructed a deck right now a B/B, to clear doubts about it colors a blue/black deck, a discarded deck.
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