Tibalt: Difference between revisions

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===Plaguing Chandra===
===Plaguing Chandra===
After the [[War of the Spark (event)|War of the Spark]], Tibalt began harassing [[Chandra Nalaar]].<ref name="IDW"/> He fronted her on Zendikar, using his magic to influence the inner pain she felt about failing Gideon. After a brief fight, his magic proved too much for the Pyromancer in her current state of self pity. Aiming to torment her and revel in the pain, he unleashed an attack on Chandra that caused her to planeswalk away to Zendikar.
After the [[War of the Spark (event)|War of the Spark]], Tibalt began harassing [[Chandra Nalaar]].<ref name="IDW"/> He fronted her on Zendikar, using his magic to influence the inner pain she felt about failing Gideon. After a brief fight, his magic proved too much for the Pyromancer in her current state of self pity. Aiming to torment her and revel in the pain, he unleashed an attack on Chandra that caused her to planeswalk away from Zendikar.


==Planes visited==
==Planes visited==

Revision as of 20:16, 19 July 2019

Tibalt
[[File:{{#setmainimage:Tibalt.jpg}}|250px]]
Details
Race Half-devil human Planeswalker
Birthplace Nephalia, Innistrad
Lifetime Post-Mending
Colors
Center: {R}
Currently: {B}{R}

Tibalt is a red-aligned half-devil human planeswalker from the dark world of Innistrad.

Appearance and characteristics

Tibalt loves to have fun in his own way, which is causing pain and misfortune to those around him. He can feel this pain, and even seeks it out, to heighten it and revel within it. He cares not for others, being selfish and sadistic to an almost inhuman degree.

Tibalt is primarily red-aligned, but secondary in black mana.

History

Ascension

Tibalt began life in Nephalia, an apprentice to one of the province's many Skaberen, but he lacked the skills required for the work of stitching together the dead. His repeated failures drove him into isolation, and there he nursed a growing hatred. In frustration, he turned his talents toward the realm of the living, using what his master had taught him to explore the true thresholds of the mortal frame. His experiments sought the limits of living organisms to withstand pain.

Tibalt began simply, using only vermin, but the further he sank into his work, the bigger his subjects became, larger animals and eventually he moved onto people. He took in vagrants, unwitting people stepping into their own deaths. As if summoned by the evil nature of these vile experiments, devils began to gather near Tibalt's laboratory at night, whispering in their diabolic, chittering tongue.

Fascinated with his work, they sought to assist him, offering Tibalt insights into his obsession, the very nature of pain. Empowered with such horrible knowledge, Tibalt grew even more sadistic and more careless. But his descent hardly went unnoticed. His neighbors began talking, whispers passed around between the townsfolk of the terrible things they suspected. Tibalt continued on, oblivious to the rumors surrounding him.

It was only a matter of time before an inquisitor's boot kicked in the door of his laboratory. Holy warriors poured into his workshop and found him in a room filled with jabbering devils and torture devices. Tibalt was caught red-handed. His crimes would finally be answered, and the severity of them called for only one punishment: execution. However he may have ignored the townsfolk who whispered, he was hardly without foresight. In that moment, cornered, he invoked a potent and hateful spell built from the devils' utterances and his own grim discoveries. The spell fused his own essence with the devils at his side. Power flooded him, but at a cost, in that moment he experienced all the suffering that he had inflicted upon others. The shock and trauma ignited Tibalt's spark and he was flung across the Blind Eternities, away from his executioners.

Tibalt vs. Sorin

Despite the peril of returning, Tibalt continued to return to his homeplane, taking a special delight in the torment of the Innistradi population. It was during one of these trips that he discovered the world in more peril than he could ever recall before, and it thrilled him. However, he soon encountered another of his kind, the vampire Sorin Markov who was attempting to spoil the diabolic fun of those that preyed on humanity. Tibalt decided that he had to interfere, if for nothing else, just to torment the ancient walker.[1]

War of the Spark

Tibalt was lured to Ravnica by the Interplanar Beacon, and immediately became trapped there due to Bolas's use of the Immortal Sun. Alongside many other planeswalkers and Ravnicans, he fought against the Eternals of Bolas' Dreadhorde, although Tibalt also delighted in tormenting civilians and causing wanton destruction. He led an army of demons and devils alongside the diabolist Davriel Cane.[2]

Tibalt survived the battle, as he was one of the many planeswalkers who left Ravnica and escaped to safety as soon as Chandra disabled the Immortal Sun.[3]

Plaguing Chandra

After the War of the Spark, Tibalt began harassing Chandra Nalaar.[3] He fronted her on Zendikar, using his magic to influence the inner pain she felt about failing Gideon. After a brief fight, his magic proved too much for the Pyromancer in her current state of self pity. Aiming to torment her and revel in the pain, he unleashed an attack on Chandra that caused her to planeswalk away from Zendikar.

Planes visited

Tibalt on Regatha

Planeswalkers met

In-game references

Represented in:

Associated cards:

Depicted in:

References

  1. Duel Decks: Sorin vs. Tibalt
  2. Greg Weisman (April 2019). "War of the Spark: Ravnica". Del Rey.
  3. a b c Vita Ayala (2018) "Magic: The Gathering - Chandra #1", IDW Publishing
  4. Zac Hill (April 13, 2012). "Walk For Two". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.