Meditation Plane: Difference between revisions
>Yandere-sliver m (→Madaran refuge: clean up) |
(→Confrontation of the twins: corrected grammar) |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
===Confrontation of the twins=== | ===Confrontation of the twins=== | ||
Many, many times and adventures later, the two planeswalking brothers confronted each other.<ref name="Perspectives"/> First above the wide waters of the Meditation Realm and then on a wild pummeling path through the planes, they struggled for days, years, generations. In the end, by diverse paths, they returned to the Meditation Realm where Bolas killed Ugin. Monstrous waves rose from | Many, many times and adventures later, the two planeswalking brothers confronted each other.<ref name="Perspectives"/> First above the wide waters of the Meditation Realm and then on a wild pummeling path through the planes, they struggled for days, years, generations. In the end, by diverse paths, they returned to the Meditation Realm where Bolas killed Ugin. Monstrous waves rose from Ugin's fall in the water. The waves ran on and on, washing far beyond the bounds of the Meditation Realm into the web of connection that links the planes and the [[Blind Eternities]]. Bolas was flung through many planes before he fell hard back into Dominaria, onto the island chain of [[Madara]]. | ||
After this confrontation, the plane became a wilderness of rock, barren and wrecked, all its serenity drained away into the interstices of the Blind Eternities.<ref name="Unwritten">{{NewRef|magic-story/chronicle-bolas-unwritten-now-2018-08-15|Chronicle of Bolas: The Unwritten Now|[[Kate Elliott]]|August 15, 2018}}</ref> A long time later it began to restore itself. A pale sheet of liquid trickled up as out of nowhere, returning from the unseen and untouchable web of darkness. With eerie silence, the realm reformed with its silvery waters. When the waters ceased rising, they grew still, and in that still mirror waited the reflection of Ugin. He inhaled, pulling the waters into himself. They curled and frothed into every crevice and wrinkle and scale and indentation until his horns sparkled and his claws gleamed and his eyes shone with magic. The dragon was reborn and floated above a once again dry seabed beneath the luminous sky. After his departure, the process of restoration started anew. | After this confrontation, the plane became a wilderness of rock, barren and wrecked, all its serenity drained away into the interstices of the Blind Eternities.<ref name="Unwritten">{{NewRef|magic-story/chronicle-bolas-unwritten-now-2018-08-15|Chronicle of Bolas: The Unwritten Now|[[Kate Elliott]]|August 15, 2018}}</ref> A long time later it began to restore itself. A pale sheet of liquid trickled up as out of nowhere, returning from the unseen and untouchable web of darkness. With eerie silence, the realm reformed with its silvery waters. When the waters ceased rising, they grew still, and in that still mirror waited the reflection of Ugin. He inhaled, pulling the waters into himself. They curled and frothed into every crevice and wrinkle and scale and indentation until his horns sparkled and his claws gleamed and his eyes shone with magic. The dragon was reborn and floated above a once again dry seabed beneath the luminous sky. After his departure, the process of restoration started anew. |
Revision as of 18:45, 6 April 2019
Meditation Plane | |
---|---|
[[File:{{#setmainimage:Pools of Becoming.jpg}}|250px]] | |
Information | |
First seen | Legends Cycle II |
Last seen | Magic Story Core Set 2019 |
Status | Stable |
The Meditation Plane (also known as Bolas's Meditation Realm) is a plane in the Multiverse. It is a surreal, always-changing plane whose geography can mirror the thoughts and potential futures of its inhabitants.[1]
History
Pre-Mending
Millenia ago, it was visited by Ugin and Bolas on their first planeswalks.[2][3] Other planes were accessible from here through bubbles floating in the air.
Confrontation of the twins
Many, many times and adventures later, the two planeswalking brothers confronted each other.[3] First above the wide waters of the Meditation Realm and then on a wild pummeling path through the planes, they struggled for days, years, generations. In the end, by diverse paths, they returned to the Meditation Realm where Bolas killed Ugin. Monstrous waves rose from Ugin's fall in the water. The waves ran on and on, washing far beyond the bounds of the Meditation Realm into the web of connection that links the planes and the Blind Eternities. Bolas was flung through many planes before he fell hard back into Dominaria, onto the island chain of Madara.
After this confrontation, the plane became a wilderness of rock, barren and wrecked, all its serenity drained away into the interstices of the Blind Eternities.[4] A long time later it began to restore itself. A pale sheet of liquid trickled up as out of nowhere, returning from the unseen and untouchable web of darkness. With eerie silence, the realm reformed with its silvery waters. When the waters ceased rising, they grew still, and in that still mirror waited the reflection of Ugin. He inhaled, pulling the waters into himself. They curled and frothed into every crevice and wrinkle and scale and indentation until his horns sparkled and his claws gleamed and his eyes shone with magic. The dragon was reborn and floated above a once again dry seabed beneath the luminous sky. After his departure, the process of restoration started anew.
The seat of Bolas
Considering the Meditation Plane the site of his greatest triumph, Bolas thought it a fitting place for him to ruminate over his plans. To give himself a focal point on which to center his meditation, he choose a spot at the center of a vast span where no islands broke the surface. Here, he erected two gigantic curved horns so they emerged from the waters as if a gargantuan dragon lay sleeping beneath.[4]
Madaran refuge
Centuries later, the Meditation Plane could only be accessed from Dominaria by skilled servants of the Madaran empire.[5]
Tetsuo Umezawa had practiced with Ayesha Tanaka for years to discover how to physically travel to the Meditation Plane. After killing the emperor's assassin Ramses Overdark in the Imperial Shrine on Madara, the champion used this skill to flee fully into the Meditation Plane. Bolas tracked the energy that Tetsuo carried—Lord Dark's essence—and projected his mind to the realm and leaving his body unprotected. In the Meditation Plane Tetsuo revealed the full extent of his plan, having destroyed Madara's rich and constant mana flow to rob Bolas of his body and unleashing Dark's essence in a living attack on Bolas's mind. The champion cleaved the elder dragon's spirit in half and narrowly escaped to Madara, just as the destructive power released in the Planeswalker's death tore and collapsed the very boundaries of the realm.[5]
However, as a result of his connection to the temporal rift, a ghostly remnant of Bolas' life force still lingered by the Madaran coast, trapped between the material world and the Meditation Realm. Using Venser's latent planeswalker spark, he was able to finally escape his prison and be fully reborn into the physical world, regaining his body by pulling a copy of it through the rift from an earlier point in time.
Post-Mending
Sarkhan Vol visited the Meditation Plane following his assignment at the Eye of Ugin. Sarkhan was debriefed by Bolas as he traveled from the Pools of Becoming to Bolas's Donjon, where he found the dragon reconstructing the unconscious body of Tezzeret.[6]
Vraska visited the Meditation Plane following an invitation she had received on Ravnica. There, Bolas offered her leadership over the Golgari if she traveled to Ixalan and successfully located the Immortal Sun.[7]
Notable locations
Planeswalker visitors
Baishya, through a link with Ugin, was able to scry into several of Ugin's memories of this plane. In the story "Chronicle of Bolas", she was the sleeping girl atop the sea. Bubbles that rose from the sea containing memories would burst as they reached her misty form, and a new memory was shared with her.
In-game references
References
- ↑ Template:NewRef
- ↑ Template:NewRef
- ↑ a b Template:NewRef
- ↑ a b Template:NewRef
- ↑ a b McGough, Scott. Champion's Trial. November 1, 2003.
- ↑ Template:NewRef
- ↑ Template:NewRef
- ↑ Template:NewRef