Nahiri: Difference between revisions

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* Nahiri’s art was modeled on the art of ''[[Worldwake]]’s'' <c>Stoneforge Mystic</c>, but that represents another character.<ref>{{TumblrRef|author=[[Doug Beyer]]|URL=http://dougbeyermtg.tumblr.com/post/101271064144/nahiri-is-fantastic-and-so-is-the-story-much-thanks|title=Is Stoneforge Mystic supposed to represent Nahiri in some way?|tumblr-title=A Voice for Vorthos|date=October 29, 2014}}</ref>
* Nahiri’s art was modeled on the art of ''[[Worldwake]]’s'' <c>Stoneforge Mystic</c>, but that represents another character.<ref>{{TumblrRef|author=[[Doug Beyer]]|URL=http://dougbeyermtg.tumblr.com/post/101271064144/nahiri-is-fantastic-and-so-is-the-story-much-thanks|title=Is Stoneforge Mystic supposed to represent Nahiri in some way?|tumblr-title=A Voice for Vorthos|date=October 29, 2014}}</ref>
* When Sorin first heard that Ugin had been involved in a battle with another planeswalker, he initially suspected that it was Nahiri.  He later discovered that this other planeswalker was [[Nicol Bolas]], but his suspicion about her involvement suggests that her largely benevolent persona had changed at some point.
* When Sorin first heard that Ugin had been involved in a battle with another planeswalker, he initially suspected that it was Nahiri.  He later discovered that this other planeswalker was [[Nicol Bolas]], but his suspicion about her involvement suggests that her largely benevolent persona had changed at some point.
* Nahiri is the first White-aligned planeswalker in a villainous role. The also White-aligned [[Gideon Jura]] in ''[[The Purifying Fire]]'' is a semi-antagonist, mostly forced to work with the protagonist, [[Chandra Nalaar]]. She is also the third White antagonist in the central antagonist role after [[Takeshi Konda]] and  [[Elesh Norn]] (though [[Radiant]], [[Augustin IV]], [[Gaddock Teeg]] and [[Heliod]] also served notable secondary antagonist roles).
* Nahiri is the first White-aligned planeswalker in a villainous role. The also White-aligned [[Gideon Jura]] in ''[[The Purifying Fire]]'' is a semi-antagonist, mostly forced to work with the protagonist, [[Chandra Nalaar]]. She is also the third White antagonist in the central antagonist role after [[Takeshi Konda]] and  [[Elesh Norn]] (though [[Radiant]], [[Augustin IV]], [[Gaddock Teeg]], [[Heliod]], [[Dromoka]] and [[Ojutai]] also served notable secondary antagonist roles).


==In-game references==
==In-game references==

Revision as of 17:25, 13 July 2016

Template:Character

Nahiri, called The Lithomancer and The Harbinger, is a talented kor stoneforger and one of The Three — a group of planeswalkers that included Sorin Markov and Ugin — that decided to rid the Multiverse of the terrible Eldrazi. Being a lithomancer, she has special power over stone.

History

The Three against the Eldrazi

Sorin and Nahiri first met when the young kor's Planeswalker spark first ignited, and they forged an unlikely friendship. Viewing her almost as a daughter, Sorin taught Nahiri about the Multiverse and introduced her to many new planes. Together, they discovered the Eldrazi, witnessing Ulamog's destruction of a long-forgotten plane. They met Ugin soon after, and the three Planeswalkers concocted a plan that bound the Eldrazi in Zendikar for millennia.

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.[1] They searched for a plane with lush ecosystems and uniquely dynamic mana—a powerful lure for the Eldrazi's insatiable hunger. Wanting to start their work immediately, the three decided upon 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 Nahiri constructed a massive network of stone hedrons, whose power would form the bars of a planewide prison, forever preventing the Eldrazi from leaving. Ugin arranged the hedrons to direct leylines of energy, which were not to be disrupted.

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 mystical lock: the Eye of Ugin could only be reactivated by the presence of three planeswalker's 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. Sorin and Ugin left the plane.

Guarding Zendikar

Nahiri stayed and lived happily among her people for a long time. The wild mana of Zendikar lured other beings to the plane as well, and Nahiri took it upon herself to protect Zendikar from those who would cause it harm. Of those, the most infamous was the interplanar conqueror Ob Nixilis, but before he could do much damage, Nahiri intervened and bound his power with that of a hedron. [2] She took on pupils and taught to maintain the hedron network.

Centuries later she became tired of living, and withdrew in a meditational slumber. The centuries passed and her teachings about the Eldrazi became garbled; Talib (Kozilek), Kamsa (Emrakul) and Mangeni (Ulamog) became the revered gods of the Kor. When vampires (which hadn't been seen on the plane in the earlier days) built a shrine on the nexus of the hedron network, the prison of the Eldrazi became unstable, and the brood lineages spilled over the plane again. Nahiri awoke and called for help to Sorin and Ugin but they didn't respond. She succeeded on her own, and restored the prison. [3] Confused why Sorin hadn't shown up when she called for him, she decided to find him and planeswalked away from Zendikar.

Imprisoned on Innistrad

When Nahiri arrived at Innistrad, Sorin explained that her signal for help had been likely absorbed by the Helvault. Discontent with the truth, Nahiri guilted Sorin for his actions. Offended, Sorin angrily reminded her of who raised her as a planeswalker and advised her to pester Ugin, instead. Nahiri saw this as a betrayal of their bond and chose to physically threaten Sorin. This resulted in Avacyn's intervention, who felt the threat that Nahiri posed to Innistrad. The two clashed, until Sorin called the battle off and banished Nahiri into the Helvault. During her long stay within the Helvault, Nahiri eventually encountered Avacyn after the archangel had sealed herself into the vault to contain an especially powerful demon.[4]

6000 years after they were initially imprisoned [5] the Eldrazi broke free, enabled by the meddling of several planeswalkers. This time, Sorin reacted and tried to reassemble The Three. But now, he was unable to find Nahiri. He found Ugin dead on original Tarkir, [6] but alive in the new timeline. [7] Ugin instructed Sorin to find Nahiri.

Revenge

When the Helvault broke, Nahiri fled back to Zendikar, only to find the Eldrazi unleashed, continents layed to waste and her allies seemingly having forsaken her. Enraged, she swore vengeance against Sorin, vowing to make Innistrad bleed in the same way Zendikar had suffered. [8] She attacked Markov Manor, destroying it with lithomancy and imprisoning its vampires in a state of perpetual agony within its walls.[9] She created cryptoliths across Innistrad, using them to channel Innistrad's ley line energy to summon Emrakul to lay waste to Innistrad as the Eldrazi had laid waste to Zendikar before it.[10] As the focal point for summoning she built the Drownyard Temple with help from Gisa's ghouls.[11] After the maddened Avacyn was killed by Sorin, Emrakul arrived and began corrupting Innistrad and its citizens. Thinking the plane lost, Sorin assembled Olivia Voldaren's vampire army to attack Nahiri in retaliation. [12] Nahiri waited for them at the destructed Markov Manor with her own army of cultists and Eldrazi abominations. In the end, Nahiri was wounded severely but managed to encase Sorin in stone. Afther this victory, she planeswalked away.

Trivia

  • The Lithomancer's identity as Nahiri was hinted at earlier [6], but finally unveiled in the Commander 2014 supplemental set.[13] [14]
  • Nahiri’s art was modeled on the art of Worldwake’s Stoneforge Mystic, but that represents another character.[15]
  • When Sorin first heard that Ugin had been involved in a battle with another planeswalker, he initially suspected that it was Nahiri. He later discovered that this other planeswalker was Nicol Bolas, but his suspicion about her involvement suggests that her largely benevolent persona had changed at some point.
  • Nahiri is the first White-aligned planeswalker in a villainous role. The also White-aligned Gideon Jura in The Purifying Fire is a semi-antagonist, mostly forced to work with the protagonist, Chandra Nalaar. She is also the third White antagonist in the central antagonist role after Takeshi Konda and Elesh Norn (though Radiant, Augustin IV, Gaddock Teeg, Heliod, Dromoka and Ojutai also served notable secondary antagonist roles).

In-game references

Represented in:

Associated cards:

Depicted in:

Quoted or referred to:

References

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  5. Error on call to {{WebRef}}: Parameters url and title must be specifiedDoug Beyer (August 17, 2014). "". Tumblr.
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  9. Markov Manor
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  14. Error on call to {{WebRef}}: Parameters url and title must be specifiedMark Rosewater (October 29, 2014). "". Tumblr.
  15. Error on call to {{WebRef}}: Parameters url and title must be specifiedDoug Beyer (October 29, 2014). "". Tumblr.