Evoke: Difference between revisions
>Yandere-sliver m (→Description: clean up, replaced: elementals → elementals) |
>Yandere-sliver m (→Description: clean up, replaced: spirits → spirits) |
||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
Evoke was introduced in ''[[Lorwyn]]'' <ref>{{NewRef|making-magic/and-rest-2007-10-01|And the Rest|[[Mark Rosewater]]|October 1, 2007}}</ref><ref>{{NewRef|making-magic/and-after-2007-10-08|Before and After|[[Mark Rosewater]]|October 08, 2007}}</ref> and expanded upon in ''[[Morningtide]]''.<ref>{{NewRef|making-magic/wait-theres-more-2008-01-14|But Wait, There's More|[[Mark Rosewater]]|January 14, 2008}}</ref> All creatures in ''Lorwyn'' with evoke have a "[[CIP|comes-into-play]]" ability.<ref name="Threshers and Blades">{{NewRef|threshers-and-blades-2007-09-19|Threshers and Blades|[[Frank Karsten]]|September 19, 2007}}</ref> The creatures with evoke in ''Morningtide'' all have "leaves play" effects. | Evoke was introduced in ''[[Lorwyn]]'' <ref>{{NewRef|making-magic/and-rest-2007-10-01|And the Rest|[[Mark Rosewater]]|October 1, 2007}}</ref><ref>{{NewRef|making-magic/and-after-2007-10-08|Before and After|[[Mark Rosewater]]|October 08, 2007}}</ref> and expanded upon in ''[[Morningtide]]''.<ref>{{NewRef|making-magic/wait-theres-more-2008-01-14|But Wait, There's More|[[Mark Rosewater]]|January 14, 2008}}</ref> All creatures in ''Lorwyn'' with evoke have a "[[CIP|comes-into-play]]" ability.<ref name="Threshers and Blades">{{NewRef|threshers-and-blades-2007-09-19|Threshers and Blades|[[Frank Karsten]]|September 19, 2007}}</ref> The creatures with evoke in ''Morningtide'' all have "leaves play" effects. | ||
Evoke is similar, but not identical, in concept to [[channel]]. Both are associated with powerful immortal creatures ([[elemental]]s and [[ | Evoke is similar, but not identical, in concept to [[channel]]. Both are associated with powerful immortal creatures ([[elemental]]s and [[spirit]]s, respectively), but where channeling a spirit merely allows a [[planeswalkers|planeswalker]] to tap into that spirit's power without actually [[summoning]] it, evoking an elemental actually brings the elemental into existence for a very brief time, whereupon its power is expended in a single moment. | ||
[[Frank Karsten]] wrote of evoke: | [[Frank Karsten]] wrote of evoke: |
Revision as of 21:46, 23 February 2019
Evoke | |
---|---|
Keyword Ability | |
Type |
Static (1st ability) Triggered (2nd ability) |
Introduced | Lorwyn |
Last used | Morningtide |
Reminder Text | Evoke [cost] (You may cast this spell for its evoke cost. If you do, it's sacrificed when it enters the battlefield.) |
Statistics |
19 cards 26% 21% 21% 16% 16% |
Scryfall Search | |
keyword:"Evoke" |
Evoke is a keyword ability that allows a player to play an alternate cost for a creature spell that possesses this ability; however, if the evoke cost is paid, the creature is sacrificed when it comes into play.
Description
Evoke was introduced in Lorwyn [1][2] and expanded upon in Morningtide.[3] All creatures in Lorwyn with evoke have a "comes-into-play" ability.[4] The creatures with evoke in Morningtide all have "leaves play" effects.
Evoke is similar, but not identical, in concept to channel. Both are associated with powerful immortal creatures (elementals and spirits, respectively), but where channeling a spirit merely allows a planeswalker to tap into that spirit's power without actually summoning it, evoking an elemental actually brings the elemental into existence for a very brief time, whereupon its power is expended in a single moment.
Frank Karsten wrote of evoke:
“ | Evoke is a new Lorwyn mechanic that represents an alternative cost. In short, it allows you to play the spell for its evoke cost rather than paying its mana cost, but if you do that, you have to sacrifice it when it comes into play. Now why would you do that? Each Lorwyn creature with evoke has a come-in-play ability. So evoke lets you pay a cheaper cost to just get the creature's comes-into-play ability. You can read the more detailed and more boring rules notes in the box.[4] | ” |
Rules
Rulings
- Playing a creature by paying its evoke cost will result in two comes-into-play abilities: The sacrifice ability from evoke, and whatever other ability the creature has. The creature's controller chooses in what order to put them on the stack. Both abilities can be responded to as normal.
- Evoke doesn't change the timing of when you can play the creature that has it. If you could play that creature spell only when you could play a sorcery, the same is true for playing it with evoke.
- If a creature spell played with evoke changes controllers before it comes into play, it will still be sacrificed when it comes into play. Similarly, if a creature played with evoke changes controllers after it comes into play but before its sacrifice ability resolves, it will still be sacrificed.
- When you play a spell by paying its evoke cost, its mana cost doesn't change. You just pay the evoke cost instead.
- Effects that cause you to pay more or less for a spell will cause you to pay that much more or less while playing it for its evoke cost, too. That's because they affect the total cost of the spell, not its mana cost.
- Whether evoke's sacrifice ability triggers when the creature comes into play depends on whether the spell's controller chose to pay the evoke cost, not whether he or she actually paid it (if it was reduced or otherwise altered by another ability, for example).
- If you're playing a spell "without paying its mana cost," you can't use its evoke ability.