Eldrazi: Difference between revisions

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*<c>Spawning Breath</c>
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*<c>Merfolk Skyscout</c>
*<c>Shrivel</c>


==Trivia==
==Trivia==

Revision as of 09:34, 14 August 2011

The Eldrazi are an ancient race native to the Blind Eternities that have neither physical form nor color alignment. Their nature is ceaseless hunger, so they travel between planes devouring the mana and life energy until the plane’s destruction. All Eldrazi descend from one of the three Eldrazi titans: Emrakul, Ulamog, and Kozilek. Eldrazi was featured as rules card 2 of 5 in the Rise of the Eldrazi set.

The Three

Millennia ago three planeswalkers: Sorin Markov, Ugin and an unnamed Lithomancer decided to rid the Multiverse of these terrible creatures. The Lithomancer would force them into physical form, and Ugin and Sorin would use respectively their knowledge of colorless magic and life-leeching energies to destroy the Eldrazi completely. But their plan failed: the Eldrazi were too powerful, so the Three were forced to consider a desperate course of action.

Imprisonment

The Three decided to force the Eldrazi into physical form and trap them on a plane, sacrificing that plane for the well-being of the Multiverse. They searched for a plane with lush ecosystems and uniquely dynamic mana—a powerful lure for the Eldrazi's insatiable hunger. They found Zendikar. Sorin Markov lured the Eldrazi to the Plane, directing their hunger to that unique mana, Ugin used his invisible breath to combat the Eldrazi and his colorless magic to bind them to the plane, and the Lithomancer constructed a massive network of stone diamonds called hedrons, whose power would form the bars of a planewide prison, forever preventing the Eldrazi from leaving. The planeswalkers concentrated the power of their imprisonment spell in a secret location deep inside Zendikar's mountains of Akoum: a subterranean chamber called the Eye of Ugin. To make sure that the imprisonment would not be broken, the three planeswalkers sealed the chamber with a kind of mystical lock: the Eye of Ugin could only be reactivated by the presence of three planeswalker sparks—and the colorless, invisible breath of Ugin, the spirit dragon himself. The planeswalkers' trap worked. Emrakul, Ulamog, and Kozilek manifested in physical form on Zendikar, became confined by the magic of the network of hedrons, and thanks to the magic of the imprisonment spell, sank into harmless dormancy. Their mission complete, the planeswalkers disbanded and left the plane.

Awakening

Several centuries passed, and the dormant Eldrazi’s hunger grew. Their prison proved tenuous, and they came close to breaking free. They rose and with them legions of lesser Eldrazi Drones: the Brood Lineage. Together they wreaked havoc upon Zendikar, consuming its mana and massacring its inhabitants. But they were unable to return to their original form and so were unable to leave Zendikar. The Three returned and re-imprisoned them, agreeing to meet again if the Eldrazi should stir once more.

Rise of the Eldrazi

And now, thousands of years since they last fed on the plane, the Eldrazi stir once more. The meeting of Sarkhan Vol, Chandra Nalaar and Jace Beleren in the Eye of Ugin chamber loosened the bonds that kept the Eldrazi in torpor, and they now rise to feed on the life of Zendikar again. Across the plane, the dormant stone hedrons come to life, changing or combining into bizarre superstructures, bending the laws of nature around them. A new generation of the brood lineages shudders into existence around their colossal progenitors, and the carnage is immediate. Each of the three colossal Eldrazi spawns its own "brood lineage." The three brood lineages are composed of Eldrazi drones and other subordinate beings, each reflecting the image of its progenitor. This time only Sorin Markov finds himself on Zendikar, and in the absence of his companions, he allies with the elf planeswalker Nissa Revane to combat this great danger.

In-Game References

Eldrazi Titans:

Eldrazi Brood Lineage:

Associated Cards:

Referred To:

Trivia

  • The idea of the Eldrazi as timeless (and evil) alien gods worshiped by ancient cultures is similar to the mythos of H.P. Lovecraft, which included extraterrestrial "gods" that will destroy our dimension and warp time and space as they enter our reality.

External links