Category:Mirari Saga: Difference between revisions

From MTG Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
>@legacy41915546
mNo edit summary
>@DeletedUser40376198
No edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:
Afterward, Karn retrieved the artifact and took it to his artificial plane, granting the Mirari sentience as [[Memnarch]] and putting it in charge, which led to the storyline of [[Mirrodin Cycle|Mirrodin]] block.  
Afterward, Karn retrieved the artifact and took it to his artificial plane, granting the Mirari sentience as [[Memnarch]] and putting it in charge, which led to the storyline of [[Mirrodin Cycle|Mirrodin]] block.  


The disjointed storytelling of this era is a result of the changing philosophy of [[Wizards of the Coast]]'s continuity department. Wizards of the Coast considered the multi-year epic style of the Weatherlight Saga to be a failure;<ref>{{Cite MTG|mr13|Add Text to Flavor|[[Mark Rosewater]]|March 25, 2002}}</ref> the Mirari Saga was but slow transitional period between that model of storytelling and the current, setting-based philosophy.
The disjointed storytelling of this era is a result of the changing philosophy of [[Wizards of the Coast]]'s continuity department. Wizards of the Coast considered the multi-year epic style of the Weatherlight Saga to be a failure;<ref>{{DailyRef|mtgcom/daily/mr13|Add Text to Flavor|[[Mark Rosewater]]|March 25, 2002}}</ref> the Mirari Saga was but slow transitional period between that model of storytelling and the current, setting-based philosophy.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:11, 2 September 2014

The Mirari Saga is the set of storylines which took place in the aftermath of the Weatherlight Saga. Not one continuous story per se, the Mirari Saga tells of the devastation wrought by a powerful artifact, the Mirari, created as a probe by Karn and sent to Dominaria, where it caused massive havoc on the continent of Otaria during Odyssey and Onslaught blocks.

Afterward, Karn retrieved the artifact and took it to his artificial plane, granting the Mirari sentience as Memnarch and putting it in charge, which led to the storyline of Mirrodin block.

The disjointed storytelling of this era is a result of the changing philosophy of Wizards of the Coast's continuity department. Wizards of the Coast considered the multi-year epic style of the Weatherlight Saga to be a failure;[1] the Mirari Saga was but slow transitional period between that model of storytelling and the current, setting-based philosophy.

References

  1. Mark Rosewater (March 25, 2002). "Add Text to Flavor". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.

Pages in category "Mirari Saga"

The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.