Urza's Destiny: Difference between revisions
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|plane = [[Dominaria (plane)|Dominaria]]<br />[[Rath]] | |plane = [[Dominaria (plane)|Dominaria]]<br />[[Rath]] | ||
|mechanics = [[Cycling]] from play creatures, [[Growing enchantment]] [[Aura]]s, Leaves play creatures, Reveal spells | |mechanics = [[Cycling]] from play creatures, [[Growing enchantment]] [[Aura]]s, Leaves play creatures, Reveal spells | ||
|size = 143 | |size = 143 cards<br/>{{curmb|55|44|44}} | ||
|code_expansion = UDS | |code_expansion = UDS | ||
|code_expansion_ref= | |code_expansion_ref= {{DailyRef|ask-wizards-august-2004-2004-08-02|Ask Wizards - August, 2004|[[Wizards of the Coast]]|August 02, 2004}} | ||
|code_development = Chimichanga | |code_development = Chimichanga | ||
|series = [[Urza's block]] | |series = [[Urza's block]] | ||
|first = | |first = Urza's Saga | ||
|second = | |second = Urza's Legacy | ||
|third = | |third = Urza's Destiny | ||
|previous = | |previous = Portal Three Kingdoms | ||
|next = | |next = Starter 1999 | ||
}} | }} | ||
''Urza's Destiny'' is the seventeenth ''[[Magic]]'' expansion and was released in June 1999 as the third set and second [[small expansion]] in the [[Urza block]]. | '''''Urza's Destiny''''' is the seventeenth ''[[Magic]]'' expansion and was released in June 1999 as the third set and second [[small expansion]] in the [[Urza block]]. | ||
==Set details== | ==Set details== | ||
''Urza's Destiny'' contains 143 black-bordered cards (44 rare, 44 uncommon, and 55 commons). Its [[expansion symbol]] is an Erlenmeyer flask, meant to symbolize | ''Urza's Destiny'' contains 143 black-bordered cards (44 rare, 44 uncommon, and 55 commons). Its [[expansion symbol]] is an Erlenmeyer flask, meant to symbolize Urza's continued experiments in finding a means to defeat Phyrexia.<ref>{{DailyRef|ask-wizards-october-2006-2006-10-02|Ask Wizards|[[Brady Dommermuth]]|October 31, 2006}}</ref> ''Urza's Destiny'' was the first and only set after ''[[Arabian Nights]]'' which has a solo designer, [[Mark Rosewater]]. It was the first [[Expert-level]], tournament legal set to be printed under the then-new ''[[6th Edition]]'' rules changes; the most notable change seen on cards is the use of the word "Creature" on the [[type line]] as opposed to "Summon". In this the set was also following the footsteps of ''[[Portal Second Age]]''. | ||
Due to an error some boosters contain [[DCI]] and [[Arena]] [[Promotional | Due to an error some boosters contain [[DCI]] and [[Arena]] [[Promotional card|promotional foils]] in the uncommon slot. The foil cards that appear this way are <c>Duress</c>, <c>Stroke of Genius</c>, <c>Gaea's Cradle</c>, <c>Thran Quarry</c>, <c>Rewind</c>, <c>Skittering Skirge</c>, <c>Pouncing Jaguar</c>, <c>Serra Avatar</c>, <c>Karn Silver Golem</c>, and <c>Lightning Bolt</c>. | ||
''Urza's Destiny'' was released on [[Magic Online]] on April 11, 2011.<ref>{{DailyRef|feature/magic-online-urzas-destiny-release-event-news-2011-04-07|Magic Online ''Urza's Destiny'' Release Event News|[[Wizards of the Coast]]|April 7, 2011}}</ref> | ''Urza's Destiny'' was released on [[Magic Online]] on April 11, 2011.<ref>{{DailyRef|feature/magic-online-urzas-destiny-release-event-news-2011-04-07|Magic Online ''Urza's Destiny'' Release Event News|[[Wizards of the Coast]]|April 7, 2011}}</ref> | ||
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==Cycles== | ==Cycles== | ||
''Urza's Destiny'' has four [[cycles]] and a [[vertical cycle]]: | ''Urza's Destiny'' has four [[cycles]] and a [[vertical cycle]]: | ||
{| class="wikitable | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! Cycle name | ! Cycle name | ||
! {{W}} | ! {{W}} | ||
! {{U}} | ! {{U}} | ||
Line 60: | Line 59: | ||
! {{G}} | ! {{G}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''Growing creature enchantments''' | |rowspan="2"|'''Growing creature enchantments''' | ||
|{{card|Archery Training||UDS}} | |{{card|Archery Training||UDS}} | ||
|{{card|Private Research||UDS}} | |{{card|Private Research||UDS}} | ||
Line 68: | Line 66: | ||
|{{card|Momentum||UDS}} | |{{card|Momentum||UDS}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | |colspan="5"|Each of these [[uncommon]] [[Aura]] [[enchantment]]s gains a counter at the beginning of each of your [[upkeep]]s, making it more powerful the longer it stays in play. These cards were inspired by the ''[[Tempest]]'' card {{card|Legacy's Allure||TMP}}.<ref>{{DailyRef|arcana/inspired-enchantments-2002-04-19|Inspired enchantments|[[Wizards of the Coast]]|April 19, 2002}}</ref> | ||
| Each of these uncommon [[ | |- | ||
|rowspan="2"|'''[[Lobotomy]] spells''' | |||
|{{card|Scour||UDS}} | |{{card|Scour||UDS}} | ||
|{{card|Quash||UDS}} | |{{card|Quash||UDS}} | ||
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|{{card|Splinter||UDS}} | |{{card|Splinter||UDS}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | |colspan="5"|Each of these uncommon [[instant]]s or [[sorceries]] removes a permanent of a certain type from the game, then also removes all other copies of the card in its controller's [[graveyard]], [[hand]], and [[library]] from the game. This cycle was based on the ''[[Tempest]]'' card {{card|Lobotomy||TMP}}. Each of these cards were reprinted in ''[[Betrayers of Kamigawa]]''. | ||
| Each of these [[ | |- | ||
|rowspan="2"|'''Scents''' | |||
|{{card|Scent of Jasmine||UDS}} | |{{card|Scent of Jasmine||UDS}} | ||
|{{card|Scent of Brine||UDS}} | |{{card|Scent of Brine||UDS}} | ||
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|{{card|Scent of Ivy||UDS}} | |{{card|Scent of Ivy||UDS}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | |colspan="5"|Each of these [[common]] instants or sorceries have effects that are proportional to the number of cards of their color you reveal from your hand. | ||
| Each of these | |- | ||
|rowspan="2"|'''Seers''' | |||
|{{card|Jasmine Seer||UDS}} | |{{card|Jasmine Seer||UDS}} | ||
|{{card|Brine Seer||UDS}} | |{{card|Brine Seer||UDS}} | ||
Line 91: | Line 92: | ||
|{{card|Cinder Seer||UDS}} | |{{card|Cinder Seer||UDS}} | ||
|{{card|Ivy Seer||UDS}} | |{{card|Ivy Seer||UDS}} | ||
|- | |||
|colspan="5"|Each of these uncommon 1/1 [[Wizard]] [[creature]]s have an activated ability costing {{2}}M that mimics the Scent cycle. | |||
|} | |} | ||
===Vertical cycle=== | ===Vertical cycle=== | ||
{| class="wikitable | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! Cycle name | ! Cycle name | ||
! {{keyrune|UDS}} | ! {{keyrune|UDS}} | ||
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===Mega-mega cycles=== | ===Mega-mega cycles=== | ||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
! Cycle name | |||
! {{W}} | |||
! {{U}} | |||
! {{B}} | |||
! {{R}} | |||
! {{G}} | |||
|- | |||
|- | |||
|rowspan="2"|'''Legendary lands''' | |||
|{{card|Kor Haven|Nemesis}} | |||
|{{card|Teferi's Isle|Mirage}} | |||
|{{card|Volrath's Stronghold|Stronghold}} | |||
|{{card|Keldon Necropolis|Invasion}} | |||
|{{card|Yavimaya Hollow|Urza's Destiny}} | |||
|- | |||
|colspan="5"|{{card|Yavimaya Hollow||UDS}} is the third card in this mega-[[mega cycle]] of lands representing notable locations from the [[Weatherlight Saga]] storyline. | |||
|- | |||
|rowspan="2"|'''Voices''' | |||
|{{card|Voice of Truth|Nemesis}} | |||
|{{card|Voice of Reason|Urza's Destiny}} | |||
|{{card|Voice of Grace|Urza's Saga}} | |||
|{{card|Voice of Law|Urza's Saga}} | |||
|{{card|Voice of Duty|Urza's Destiny}} | |||
|- | |||
|colspan="5"|{{card|Voice of Reason||UDS}} and {{card|Voice of Duty||UDS}} is the third and fourth card in this mega-[[mega cycle]]. These are uncommon white 2/2 [[Angel]]s that has a mana cost of {{3}}{{W}} and have [[protection]] from a different color. {{card|Voice of All||PLS}}, who has protection from a color chosen as it enters the battlefield, would be released in [[Planeshift]] as an homage to the mega-mega cycle. | |||
|} | |||
==Notable cards== | ==Notable cards== | ||
*<c>Carnival of Souls</c> looks like a combo engine but has a difficult-to-exploit payoff and plays badly during the era of mana burn. It is notable as being one of the worst cards ever. | |||
*<c>Carnival of Souls</c> | *<c>Donate</c> and <c>Illusions of Grandeur</c> were integral pieces of the [[Combo deck#later combo decks|Trix]] decks. | ||
*<c>Donate</c> | *<c>Elvish Piper</c> became one of the games most well-known "[[Timmy]]"-cards. | ||
*<c>Elvish Piper</c> | *<c>Flicker</c> spawned [[Flicker]], a mechanic and its associated archetype of deck. | ||
*<c> | *<c>Magnify</c> is one of four cards that are global pump effects and one of two (with <c>Thran weaponry</c>) to increase toughness. | ||
* <c>Mask of Law and Grace</c> | *<c>Mask of Law and Grace</c> is reference to <c>Voice of Law</c> and <c>Voice of Grace</c> from [[Urza's Saga]]. It would go on to form a parallel pair with <c>Shield of Duty and Reason</c> from [[Apocalypse]], referring to the two Voices in this set. | ||
*<c>Masticore</c> | *<c>Masticore</c> was resistant to multiple forms of removal and punishing to the small creatures of the time. It was renowned for its powerful, inspired a creature archetype ([[Masticore]]) and was later referred to on <c>Deep Analysis</c>. | ||
*<c>Opposition</c> spawned multiple prison-decks most notably "Squirrel-prison", locking out the opponent's lands with enough creatures. It remains a Vintage Cube build-around to this day. | |||
*<c>Opposition</c> | *<c>Phyrexian Negator</c> was powered out with <c>Dark Ritual </c> and an essential part to many suicide-black decks. | ||
*<c>Phyrexian Negator</c> | *<c>Powder Keg</c> became the board-sweeper of choice with <c>Nevinyrral's Disk</c> leaving Standard after ''[[5th Edition]]''. | ||
*<c>Storage Matrix</c> was the last reference to the "Mono-Artifact" rule seen on things like <c>Winter Orb</c> until ''[[Mirrodin]]'' made a few more call-backs. | |||
*<c>Powder Keg</c> | *<c>Treachery</c> was used in many blue control decks like Draw-Go. | ||
*<c> | *<c>Replenish</c>, <c>Opalescence</c> and <c>Academy Rector</c> formed a combo deck based on discarding and milling many enchantments. | ||
*<c>Treachery</c> | **<c>Replenish</c> was banned from Extended, and Legacy when the format started, but was unbanned in June 2007. | ||
*<c>Yawgmoth's Bargain</c> | **<c>Opalescence</c> was infamous for being in Standard with <c>Humility</c>, a [[layer]]ing rules headache. | ||
**<c>Academy Rector</c> still forms the backbone of multiple combos, especially with <c>Omniscience</c>, and even <c>Yawgmoth's Bargain</c> in the same set. | |||
===Banned and Restricted cards=== | |||
*<c>Rofellos, Llanowar Emissary</c> can generate an absurd amount of mana. It rotated in and out of the Commander banlist as they moved around the banned-as-commander rule. | |||
*<c>Yawgmoth's Bargain</c> is a strong variation on <c>Necropotence</c>, as the cards are drawn immediately. It was banned throughout all of Legacy's lifetime and was only unrestricted in Vintage in 2018. | |||
*<c>Metalworker</c> can produce tons of mana in the many artifact-decks of the day. It was banned in Legacy from inception until June 2009, and banned in Commander until September 2014. | |||
==Reprinted cards== | ==Reprinted cards== | ||
Line 133: | Line 167: | ||
==Functional reprints== | ==Functional reprints== | ||
''Urza's Destiny'' has one [[functional reprint]]: | ''Urza's Destiny'' has one [[functional reprint]]: | ||
*<c>Wild Colos</c> is a functional reprint of <c>Raging Cougar</c> from ''[[Portal]]'', save for creature type. | *<c>Wild Colos</c> is a functional reprint of <c>Raging Cougar</c> from ''[[Portal]]'', save for creature type. | ||
== Preconstructed decks == | ==Preconstructed decks== | ||
{{Main|Urza's Destiny/Theme decks}} | {{Main|Urza's Destiny/Theme decks}} | ||
{{Decks|theme | {{Decks|theme | ||
|[[Urza's Destiny/Theme decks#Assassin|Assassin]]|B | |[[Urza's Destiny/Theme decks#Assassin|Assassin]]|B | ||
|Enchanter|WU | |||
|Battle Surge|UR | |Battle Surge|UR | ||
|Fiendish Nature|BG | |Fiendish Nature|BG | ||
}} | }} | ||
Line 150: | Line 183: | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
*{{ | *{{DailyRef|making-magic/lessons-learned-part-1|Lesson Learned, Part 1|[[Mark Rosewater]]|March 14, 2023}} | ||
{{ | {{Sets|state=collapsed}} | ||
{{ | {{Dominaria|name=Urza's|block}} | ||
Latest revision as of 01:27, 20 April 2024
Urza's Destiny | |||||
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[[File:{{#setmainimage:Urzasdestiny logo.png}}|250px]] | |||||
Set Information | |||||
Set symbol | |||||
Symbol description | Erlenmeyer flask | ||||
Design | Mark Rosewater (lead) | ||||
Development |
Mike Elliott (lead) William Jockusch Charlie Keldono Paul Peterson Bill Rose Henry Stern | ||||
Art direction | Ron Spears | ||||
Release date | June 7, 1999 | ||||
Plane |
Dominaria Rath | ||||
Themes and mechanics | Cycling from play creatures, Growing enchantment Auras, Leaves play creatures, Reveal spells | ||||
Set size |
143 cards (55 commons, 44 uncommons, 44 rares) | ||||
Expansion code | UDS[1] | ||||
Development codename | Chimichanga | ||||
Urza's block | |||||
| |||||
Magic: The Gathering Chronology | |||||
|
Urza's Destiny is the seventeenth Magic expansion and was released in June 1999 as the third set and second small expansion in the Urza block.
Set details
Urza's Destiny contains 143 black-bordered cards (44 rare, 44 uncommon, and 55 commons). Its expansion symbol is an Erlenmeyer flask, meant to symbolize Urza's continued experiments in finding a means to defeat Phyrexia.[2] Urza's Destiny was the first and only set after Arabian Nights which has a solo designer, Mark Rosewater. It was the first Expert-level, tournament legal set to be printed under the then-new 6th Edition rules changes; the most notable change seen on cards is the use of the word "Creature" on the type line as opposed to "Summon". In this the set was also following the footsteps of Portal Second Age.
Due to an error some boosters contain DCI and Arena promotional foils in the uncommon slot. The foil cards that appear this way are Duress, Stroke of Genius, Gaea's Cradle, Thran Quarry, Rewind, Skittering Skirge, Pouncing Jaguar, Serra Avatar, Karn Silver Golem, and Lightning Bolt.
Urza's Destiny was released on Magic Online on April 11, 2011.[3]
Marketing
The cards were sold in 15-card boosters which had artwork from Emperor Crocodile and in four preconstructed theme decks. The Official Urza's Destiny Game Guide is the guide to the cards in the set. It was written by Will McDermott, editor of The Duelist at the time. The set was also accompanied by Bloodlines, the final novel in the Artifacts Cycle. The prerelease card was a foil False Prophet.
Storyline
With the Weatherlight completed, Urza now works on a eugenics program to create a perfect crew for it, as well as engineering a race of soldiers to fight the Phyrexian invasion. One of his geneticists, Gatha, defects, and uses his knowledge to improve the Keldon race. Meanwhile, the Phyrexians create the plane of Rath as a staging ground for the invasion.
Themes and mechanics
The "reveal" cards come in two types: creatures (Seers) and spells (Scents). When you use a Seer ability or a Scent spell, you show your opponents any number of cards of the specified color that are currently in your hand. The number of cards revealed determines the power of the effect.
Urza's Destiny also has a strong theme of graveyard effects. Many creatures and a few enchantments have special abilities that trigger when the permanent is put into a graveyard (e.g. When Aura Thief goes to the graveyard, you gain control of all enchantments).
The set also further develops the cycling theme introduced in the previous two sets with "cycling from play" creatures. These creatures, such as Brass Secretary and Yavimaya Elder, do not have cycling as a keyword, but instead have the activated ability ", sacrifice this creature: Draw a card." This ability is similar to cycling, but is used while the creature is in play rather than in your hand.[4]
Creature types
The following creature types are introduced in this expansion: Golem.
The following creature types are used in this expansion but also appear in previous sets: Angel, Ape, Barbarian, Beast, Beeble, Bird, Cleric, Crocodile, Dragon, Drake, Druid, Elemental, Elf, Giant, Goblin, Griffin, Horror, Hound, Illusion, Imp, Insect, Knight, Minion, Ogre, Rat, Skeleton, Soldier, Spider, Townsfolk (later changed to Human), Wall, Wizard.
Cycles
Urza's Destiny has four cycles and a vertical cycle:
Cycle name | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Growing creature enchantments | Archery Training | Private Research | Festering Wound | Incendiary | Momentum |
Each of these uncommon Aura enchantments gains a counter at the beginning of each of your upkeeps, making it more powerful the longer it stays in play. These cards were inspired by the Tempest card Legacy's Allure.[5] | |||||
Lobotomy spells | Scour | Quash | Eradicate | Sowing Salt | Splinter |
Each of these uncommon instants or sorceries removes a permanent of a certain type from the game, then also removes all other copies of the card in its controller's graveyard, hand, and library from the game. This cycle was based on the Tempest card Lobotomy. Each of these cards were reprinted in Betrayers of Kamigawa. | |||||
Scents | Scent of Jasmine | Scent of Brine | Scent of Nightshade | Scent of Cinder | Scent of Ivy |
Each of these common instants or sorceries have effects that are proportional to the number of cards of their color you reveal from your hand. | |||||
Seers | Jasmine Seer | Brine Seer | Nightshade Seer | Cinder Seer | Ivy Seer |
Each of these uncommon 1/1 Wizard creatures have an activated ability costing M that mimics the Scent cycle. |
Vertical cycle
Cycle name | |||
---|---|---|---|
Enchanted bonus creatures | Fledgling Osprey | Metathran Elite | Rayne, Academy Chancellor |
These blue creatures gain an ability as long as they are enchanted: (in order of rarity). Thran Golem is similar to this cycle, but is an artifact. |
Mega-mega cycles
Cycle name | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Legendary lands | Kor Haven (Nemesis) | Teferi's Isle (Mirage) | Volrath's Stronghold (Stronghold) | Keldon Necropolis (Invasion) | Yavimaya Hollow (Urza's Destiny) |
Yavimaya Hollow is the third card in this mega-mega cycle of lands representing notable locations from the Weatherlight Saga storyline. | |||||
Voices | Voice of Truth (Nemesis) | Voice of Reason (Urza's Destiny) | Voice of Grace (Urza's Saga) | Voice of Law (Urza's Saga) | Voice of Duty (Urza's Destiny) |
Voice of Reason and Voice of Duty is the third and fourth card in this mega-mega cycle. These are uncommon white 2/2 Angels that has a mana cost of and have protection from a different color. Voice of All, who has protection from a color chosen as it enters the battlefield, would be released in Planeshift as an homage to the mega-mega cycle. |
Notable cards
- Carnival of Souls looks like a combo engine but has a difficult-to-exploit payoff and plays badly during the era of mana burn. It is notable as being one of the worst cards ever.
- Donate and Illusions of Grandeur were integral pieces of the Trix decks.
- Elvish Piper became one of the games most well-known "Timmy"-cards.
- Flicker spawned Flicker, a mechanic and its associated archetype of deck.
- Magnify is one of four cards that are global pump effects and one of two (with Thran weaponry) to increase toughness.
- Mask of Law and Grace is reference to Voice of Law and Voice of Grace from Urza's Saga. It would go on to form a parallel pair with Shield of Duty and Reason from Apocalypse, referring to the two Voices in this set.
- Masticore was resistant to multiple forms of removal and punishing to the small creatures of the time. It was renowned for its powerful, inspired a creature archetype (Masticore) and was later referred to on Deep Analysis.
- Opposition spawned multiple prison-decks most notably "Squirrel-prison", locking out the opponent's lands with enough creatures. It remains a Vintage Cube build-around to this day.
- Phyrexian Negator was powered out with Dark Ritual and an essential part to many suicide-black decks.
- Powder Keg became the board-sweeper of choice with Nevinyrral's Disk leaving Standard after 5th Edition.
- Storage Matrix was the last reference to the "Mono-Artifact" rule seen on things like Winter Orb until Mirrodin made a few more call-backs.
- Treachery was used in many blue control decks like Draw-Go.
- Replenish, Opalescence and Academy Rector formed a combo deck based on discarding and milling many enchantments.
- Replenish was banned from Extended, and Legacy when the format started, but was unbanned in June 2007.
- Opalescence was infamous for being in Standard with Humility, a layering rules headache.
- Academy Rector still forms the backbone of multiple combos, especially with Omniscience, and even Yawgmoth's Bargain in the same set.
Banned and Restricted cards
- Rofellos, Llanowar Emissary can generate an absurd amount of mana. It rotated in and out of the Commander banlist as they moved around the banned-as-commander rule.
- Yawgmoth's Bargain is a strong variation on Necropotence, as the cards are drawn immediately. It was banned throughout all of Legacy's lifetime and was only unrestricted in Vintage in 2018.
- Metalworker can produce tons of mana in the many artifact-decks of the day. It was banned in Legacy from inception until June 2009, and banned in Commander until September 2014.
Reprinted cards
The following cards have been reprinted from previous sets and included in Urza's Destiny.
- Ravenous Rats — was last seen in Portal Second Age.
Functional reprints
Urza's Destiny has one functional reprint:
- Wild Colos is a functional reprint of Raging Cougar from Portal, save for creature type.
Preconstructed decks
Theme deck name |
Colors Included | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Assassin | B | ||||
Enchanter | W | U | |||
Battle Surge | U | R | |||
Fiendish Nature | B | G |
References
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (August 02, 2004). "Ask Wizards - August, 2004". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Brady Dommermuth (October 31, 2006). "Ask Wizards". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (April 7, 2011). "Magic Online Urza's Destiny Release Event News". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (April 29, 2013). "Third Time's the Charm". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Wizards of the Coast (April 19, 2002). "Inspired enchantments". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
External links
- Mark Rosewater (March 14, 2023). "Lesson Learned, Part 1". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.