Kaladesh: Difference between revisions
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|colspan="5"|Five common artifact creatures that have an activated ability costing one colored mana that gives them a color-aligned keyword | |colspan="5"|Five common artifact creatures that have an activated ability costing one colored mana that gives them a color-aligned keyword | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Cycle name | ! Cycle name | ||
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! {{G}}{{U}} | ! {{G}}{{U}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| rowspan="2" |'''Enemy-colored [[fast land]]s''' | |||
|rowspan="2"|'''Enemy-colored [[fast land]]s''' | |||
|{{card|Concealed Courtyard||KLD}} | |{{card|Concealed Courtyard||KLD}} | ||
|{{card|Spirebluff Canal||KLD}} | |{{card|Spirebluff Canal||KLD}} | ||
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|{{card|Botanical Sanctum||KLD}} | |{{card|Botanical Sanctum||KLD}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
|colspan="5"|A new set of [[enemy color]]ed [[tapland]]s was introduced, finishing the cycle started in ''[[Scars of Mirrodin]]'' | | colspan="5" |A new set of [[enemy color]]ed [[tapland]]s was introduced, finishing the cycle started in ''[[Scars of Mirrodin]]'' | ||
|} | |||
===Double cycles=== | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
!Cycle name | |||
!{{W}}{{U}} | |||
!{{U}}{{B}} | |||
!{{B}}{{R}} | |||
!{{R}}{{G}} | |||
!{{G}}{{W}} | |||
!{{W}}{{B}} | |||
!{{U}}{{R}} | |||
!{{B}}{{G}} | |||
!{{R}}{{W}} | |||
!{{G}}{{U}} | |||
|- | |||
| rowspan="2" |'''[[Multicolored|Gold]] [[List of Magic slang#Signpost|signpost]] [[Uncommon|uncommons]]''' | |||
|{{card|Cloudblazer||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Contraband Kingpin||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Unlicensed Disintegration||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Voltaic Brawler||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Engineered Might||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Restoration Gearsmith||KLD}} | |||
| {{card|Whirler Virtuoso||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Hazardous Conditions||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Veteran Motorist||KLD}} | |||
|{{card|Empyreal Voyager||KLD}} | |||
|- | |||
| colspan="10" |Ten uncommon gold cards, each supporting a draft archetype. | |||
|} | |||
===Mega cycle=== | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
ng the cycle started in ''[[Scars of Mirrodin]]'' | |||
|} | |} | ||
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|{{card|Lifecrafter's Bestiary|Aether Revolt}} | |{{card|Lifecrafter's Bestiary|Aether Revolt}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | |co|} | ||
|} | |||
===Triplet=== | ===Triplet=== | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! colspan="3"|Modules | ! colspan="3" |Modules | ||
!Description | ! Description | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{card|Fabrication Module||KLD}} | |{{card|Fabrication Module||KLD}} | ||
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{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! colspan="2"|Mirrored Pairs | ! colspan="2" |Mirrored Pairs | ||
!Description | !Description | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{card|Built to Last||KLD}} <br/> {{nowrap|({{W}})}} | |{{card|Built to Last||KLD}} <br /> {{nowrap|({{W}})}} | ||
|{{card|Built to Smash||KLD}} <br/> {{nowrap|({{R}})}} | |{{card|Built to Smash||KLD}} <br /> {{nowrap|({{R}})}} | ||
|A white and a red combat trick respectively, each giving a boost to the target creature and indestructible or trample respectively if it's an artifact. The art and flavor text both appear to be in sequence as well. | |A white and a red combat trick respectively, each giving a boost to the target creature and indestructible or trample respectively if it's an artifact. The art and flavor text both appear to be in sequence as well. | ||
|} | |} | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! colspan="2"|Matched Pairs | ! colspan="2" | Matched Pairs | ||
!Description | !Description | ||
|- | |- | ||
|{{card|Live Fast||KLD}} <br/> {{nowrap|({{B}})}} | |{{card|Live Fast||KLD}} <br /> {{nowrap|({{B}})}} | ||
|{{card|Die Young||KLD}} <br/> {{nowrap|({{B}})}} | |{{card|Die Young||KLD}} <br /> {{nowrap|({{B}})}} | ||
|Two black cards whose names form a famous unofficial slogan of rock&roll and punk subcultures. These cards also represent a short life of aetherborn and have a synergy between them | |Two black cards whose names form a famous unofficial slogan of rock&roll and punk subcultures. These cards also represent a short life of aetherborn and have a synergy between them | ||
|} | |} | ||
==Reprinted cards== | == Reprinted cards== | ||
*<c>Aether Tradewinds</c>, first printed in ''[[Worldwake]]'', last seen in ''[[Conspiracy]]''. | *<c>Aether Tradewinds</c>, first printed in ''[[Worldwake]]'', last seen in ''[[Conspiracy]]''. | ||
*<c>Chief of the Foundry</c>, first printed in ''[[Magic Origins]]''. | *<c>Chief of the Foundry</c>, first printed in ''[[Magic Origins]]''. | ||
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*<c>Diabolic Tutor</c>, first printed in ''[[Odyssey]]'', last seen in ''[[Conspiracy: Take the Crown]]''. | *<c>Diabolic Tutor</c>, first printed in ''[[Odyssey]]'', last seen in ''[[Conspiracy: Take the Crown]]''. | ||
*<c>Hunt the Weak</c>, first printed in ''[[Magic 2014]]'', last seen in ''[[Dragons of Tarkir]]''. | *<c>Hunt the Weak</c>, first printed in ''[[Magic 2014]]'', last seen in ''[[Dragons of Tarkir]]''. | ||
*<c>Inspired Charge</c>, first printed in ''[[Magic 2011]]'', last seen in ''[[Battle for Zendikar]]''. | * <c>Inspired Charge</c>, first printed in ''[[Magic 2011]]'', last seen in ''[[Battle for Zendikar]]''. | ||
*<c>Mind Rot</c>, first printed in ''[[Portal]]'', last seen in ''[[Magic Origins]]''.<!--or should that be welcome decks?--> | * <c>Mind Rot</c>, first printed in ''[[Portal]]'', last seen in ''[[Magic Origins]]''.<!--or should that be welcome decks?--> | ||
*<c>Pressure Point</c>, first printed in ''[[Fate Reforged]]''. | * <c>Pressure Point</c>, first printed in ''[[Fate Reforged]]''. | ||
*<c>Wind Drake</c>, first printed in ''[[Portal]]'', last seen in ''[[Dragon's Maze]]''. | *<c>Wind Drake</c>, first printed in ''[[Portal]]'', last seen in ''[[Dragon's Maze]]''. | ||
*<c>Prophetic Prism</c>, first printed in ''[[Rise of the Eldrazi]]'', last seen in ''[[Gatecrash]]''. | *<c>Prophetic Prism</c>, first printed in ''[[Rise of the Eldrazi]]'', last seen in ''[[Gatecrash]]''. | ||
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*<c>Inventors' Fair</c> is a land with powerful upside in artifact decks and has become a staple in Modern, Legacy, and Vintage. | *<c>Inventors' Fair</c> is a land with powerful upside in artifact decks and has become a staple in Modern, Legacy, and Vintage. | ||
*<c>Authority of the Consuls</c> proved to be a valuable tool for white control decks in Standard as a bulwark against aggressive decks. | *<c>Authority of the Consuls</c> proved to be a valuable tool for white control decks in Standard as a bulwark against aggressive decks. | ||
*<c>Panharmonicon</c> is the first card to "double" triggered abilities, lending its name to later cards with a similar effect and being a favorite of creative deck-builders. | * <c>Panharmonicon</c> is the first card to "double" triggered abilities, lending its name to later cards with a similar effect and being a favorite of creative deck-builders. | ||
*<c>Aetherflux Reservoir</c> is a popular card for casual Commander decks focused on gaining life, but eventually found success in the Pioneer combo deck built around <c>Amalia Benavides Aguirre</c> and <c>Wildgrowth Walker</c> which could gain enough life to use the ability in a single turn. | *<c>Aetherflux Reservoir</c> is a popular card for casual Commander decks focused on gaining life, but eventually found success in the Pioneer combo deck built around <c>Amalia Benavides Aguirre</c> and <c>Wildgrowth Walker</c> which could gain enough life to use the ability in a single turn. | ||
*<c>Kambal, Consul of Allocation</c> has seen play in a variety of competitive decks as a sideboard plan and threat against control and combo decks. | * <c>Kambal, Consul of Allocation</c> has seen play in a variety of competitive decks as a sideboard plan and threat against control and combo decks. | ||
*<c>Chandra, Torch of Defiance</c> was a Standard defining card and among the most powerful Planeswalkers ever printed, and still sees consistent play in aggressive decks in Pioneer, Modern, Legacy, and even Vintage. She is particularly strong in older formats where she can be combined with prison strategies to prevent the opponent from playing while slowly burning them out with her loyalty abilities. | *<c>Chandra, Torch of Defiance</c> was a Standard defining card and among the most powerful Planeswalkers ever printed, and still sees consistent play in aggressive decks in Pioneer, Modern, Legacy, and even Vintage. She is particularly strong in older formats where she can be combined with prison strategies to prevent the opponent from playing while slowly burning them out with her loyalty abilities. | ||
*<c>Skysovereign, Consul Flagship</c> appeared in numerous Standard decks in every color but has performed especially well in Pioneer where it is both an aggro finisher and a combo piece with <c>Greasefang, Okiba Boss</c>. | *<c>Skysovereign, Consul Flagship</c> appeared in numerous Standard decks in every color but has performed especially well in Pioneer where it is both an aggro finisher and a combo piece with <c>Greasefang, Okiba Boss</c>. | ||
*<c>Paradoxical Outcome</c> is the key combo piece in the eponymous Legacy and Vintage Paradoxical Storm decks, where it can be used to replay mana rocks to generate mana also while drawing dozens of cards. | *<c>Paradoxical Outcome</c> is the key combo piece in the eponymous Legacy and Vintage Paradoxical Storm decks, where it can be used to replay mana rocks to generate mana also while drawing dozens of cards. | ||
*<c>Torrential Gearhulk</c> is a common win condition for control decks in Standard and Pioneer, where it can flashback a counterspell or removal spell while adding a massive body to the board. | *<c>Torrential Gearhulk</c> is a common win condition for control decks in Standard and Pioneer, where it can flashback a counterspell or removal spell while adding a massive body to the board. | ||
*<c>Fumigate</c> was the boardwipe of choice for over a year in Standard because of its ability to stabilize a control deck from a low life total. | * <c>Fumigate</c> was the boardwipe of choice for over a year in Standard because of its ability to stabilize a control deck from a low life total. | ||
*<c>Cultivator's Caravan</c> combined mana fixing and aggressive stats to see play in multiple Standard aggro decks like Mardu Vehicles. | * <c>Cultivator's Caravan</c> combined mana fixing and aggressive stats to see play in multiple Standard aggro decks like Mardu Vehicles. | ||
*<c>Bomat Courier</c> and <c>Scrapheap Scrounger</c> were aggro deck staples while in Standard, even seeing play in Rakdos decks together. | *<c>Bomat Courier</c> and <c>Scrapheap Scrounger</c> were aggro deck staples while in Standard, even seeing play in Rakdos decks together. | ||
*<c>Electrostatic Pummeler</c>, <c>Bristling Hydra</c>, <c>Harnessed Lightning</c>, and <c>Voltaic Brawler</c> combined in various combinations to form an aggressive red-green aggro deck in Standard which also translated into success in Pioneer and Historic. | *<c>Electrostatic Pummeler</c>, <c>Bristling Hydra</c>, <c>Harnessed Lightning</c>, and <c>Voltaic Brawler</c> combined in various combinations to form an aggressive red-green aggro deck in Standard which also translated into success in Pioneer and Historic. | ||
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*<c>Fleetwheel Cruiser</c> has seen unexpected play in Vintage since being printed, particularly because of its ability to be cast off of <c>Mishra's Workshop</c> as early as turn 1. | *<c>Fleetwheel Cruiser</c> has seen unexpected play in Vintage since being printed, particularly because of its ability to be cast off of <c>Mishra's Workshop</c> as early as turn 1. | ||
*<c>Unlicensed Disintegration</c> was a staple removal card for red-black decks in Standard, combining removal with direct damage. | *<c>Unlicensed Disintegration</c> was a staple removal card for red-black decks in Standard, combining removal with direct damage. | ||
*<c>Lost Legacy</c> sees sideboard play in every format where it is legal as a way to dismantle combo decks. | * <c>Lost Legacy</c> sees sideboard play in every format where it is legal as a way to dismantle combo decks. | ||
*Despite its weak appearance, <c>Appetite for the Unnatural</c> was a heavily played sideboard card for green decks in Standard. | *Despite its weak appearance, <c>Appetite for the Unnatural</c> was a heavily played sideboard card for green decks in Standard. | ||
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*Following rotation and the release of [[Ixalan]], the new Tribal set did not instill any amount of creativity into the meta-game, with the disruptable synergies not coming close to base-rate cards in the Energy or mono-Red decks. Analysis from the Magic Online results showed that the Red deck had absurdly good matchups against anything in the format that was not Energy-based, resulting in a similar field to the Mardu vs Saheeli duality after Aether Revolt. These results were cited for the bannings in January 2018; <c>Attune with Aether</c> was chosen alongside <c>Rogue Refiner</c> to be banned to weaken the Energy deck, while <c>Ramunap Ruins</c> and <c>Rampaging Ferocidon</c> were banned from the Ramunap Red deck. | *Following rotation and the release of [[Ixalan]], the new Tribal set did not instill any amount of creativity into the meta-game, with the disruptable synergies not coming close to base-rate cards in the Energy or mono-Red decks. Analysis from the Magic Online results showed that the Red deck had absurdly good matchups against anything in the format that was not Energy-based, resulting in a similar field to the Mardu vs Saheeli duality after Aether Revolt. These results were cited for the bannings in January 2018; <c>Attune with Aether</c> was chosen alongside <c>Rogue Refiner</c> to be banned to weaken the Energy deck, while <c>Ramunap Ruins</c> and <c>Rampaging Ferocidon</c> were banned from the Ramunap Red deck. | ||
==Preconstructed decks== | ==Preconstructed decks == | ||
{{Main|Kaladesh/Planeswalker decks}} | {{Main|Kaladesh/Planeswalker decks}} | ||
Revision as of 01:57, 13 May 2024
- For the plane, see Kaladesh (plane).
Kaladesh | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[[File:{{#setmainimage:KLD set logo.png}}|250px]] | |||||
Set Information | |||||
Set symbol | |||||
Symbol description | Swirling aether | ||||
Design |
Mark Rosewater (co-lead) Shawn Main (co-lead) Doug Beyer Scott Van Essen Mark Gottlieb Adam Prosak Ben Hayes Drew Nolosco Jonathon Loucks | ||||
Development |
Erik Lauer (co-lead) by Matt Tabak and Eli Shiffrin | ||||
Art direction | Jeremy Jarvis | ||||
Release date | September 30, 2016 | ||||
Plane | Kaladesh | ||||
Themes and mechanics | Energy counters, Vehicles, Colored artifacts | ||||
Keywords/ability words | Crew, Fabricate | ||||
Set size |
264 cards (101 commons, 80 uncommons, 53 rares, 15 mythic rares, 15 basic lands) +10 Planeswalker deck exclusives (2 commons, 2 uncommons, 2 rares, 2 mythic rares, 2 common dual lands) | ||||
Expansion code | KLD[1] | ||||
Development codename | Lock | ||||
Kaladesh block | |||||
| |||||
Magic: The Gathering Chronology | |||||
|
Kaladesh is the 72nd Magic expansion, and the first in the Kaladesh block. It was released on September 30, 2016,[2] and is a large expansion. It is set on the plane of the same name.
Set details
Kaladesh contains 264 cards (15 basic lands,[3] 101 commons, 80 uncommons, 53 rares, 15 mythic rares) and includes randomly inserted premium versions of all cards.[4] The expansion symbol is a Far Eastern-inspired floral motif, representing the aether of the plane. Kaladesh premieres Planeswalker decks, which replace Intro packs. These contain 10 additional cards that are considered to be part of the set (2 mythic planeswalkers, 2 rares, 2 uncommons, 2 commons, and 2 common dual lands). These are numbered #265/264 to #274/264). The Fat pack for this set was reimagined as the Kaladesh Bundle.[5]
Although Wizards of the Coast used the ligature Æ — the A and E combined into one letter — for aether since the beginning of the game, this was changed for Kaladesh, which features the stuff heavily. According to Blake Rasmussen, it caused way more issues than it was worth (particularly in translation).[6] The set introduces create as a new vocabulary word. Create is used when a card or effect puts a token onto the battlefield.[7][8][9]
Storyline
“ | Invent your Tomorrow | ” |
Kaladesh (first glimpsed in Magic Origins as the birthplane of Chandra Nalaar) is a plane where natural mages are rare.[10] Work that would be done with magic on other planes is instead accomplished through devices.[11] The automatons, thopters, and other artifact creatures of the plane are fueled by aether, which is heavily trafficked. Artifacts are built as much for beauty as for function. Fire magic is strictly banned, and pyromancy is punishable with a death sentence.[12] Chandra returns to Kaladesh and saves her mother from her nemesis Baral. The Gatewatch unexpectedly is confronted by the scheming Tezzeret.[13]
Kaladesh is ruled by the Consulate. Their forces and works are nearly omnipresent.[14]
Pivotal story moments are now marked with Story Spotlight at the bottom of the card accompanied by an iterator and the total number of spotlight cards. They all have a planeswalker watermark to help signify that they are Story Spotlight cards.[15] The cards that represent the Story Spotlights in Kaladesh are: Inventors' Fair, Captured by the Consulate, Deadlock Trap, Fateful Showdown and Confiscation Coup.[16] They also refer to the new storyline url mtgstory.com.
Magic Story
Title | Author | Release Date | Setting (plane) | Featuring |
---|---|---|---|---|
Homesick | Chris L'Etoile | 2016-08-29 | Ravnica | The Gatewatch, Lavinia, Dovin Baan |
A Time for Innovation | Kimberly J. Kreines | 2016-08-31 | Kaladesh | Rashmi, Mitul, Saheeli Rai, Judge Padeem |
Torch of Defiance | Doug Beyer | 2016-09-05 | Kaladesh | Chandra, Liliana, Tezzeret, Pia Nalaar |
Renegade Prime | Mel Li | 2016-09-14 | Kaladesh | Pia Nalaar, Baral, Chandra, Liliana, Tezzeret, Oviya Pashiri |
Born of Aether | Alison Luhrs | 2016-09-21 | Kaladesh | Yahenni, Depala, Oviya Pashiri, Chandra, Nissa |
Bottled Up | James Wyatt | 2016-09-28 | Kaladesh | Oviya Pashiri, Chandra, Nissa, Baral |
Release | Chris L'Etoile | 2016-10-05 | Kamigawa, Kaladesh | Ajani, Tamiyo, Vatti/Shadowblayde, Oviya Pashiri, Chandra, Nissa |
In This Very Arena | Doug Beyer | 2016-10-12 | Ravnica, Kaladesh | Tezzeret, Pia Nalaar, the Gatewatch, Ajani |
A Grateful Consulate | James Wyatt | 2016-10-19 | Kaladesh | Tezzeret, Dovin Baan |
Marketing
Kaladesh is sold in 16-card boosters (one card being a marketing card), two planeswalker decks, the Kaladesh bundle, a Deck Builder's Toolkit, Booster Battle Packs and a Gift Box.[17] The boosters feature artwork from Saheeli Rai, Dovin Baan, Demon of Dark Schemes, Chandra, Torch of Defiance and Angel of Invention. Prerelease Events took place on September 24, 2016.[18] In addition to the normal spindown life counter and stamped premium foil promo card, Prerelease Packs contain a little make-your-own-thopter insert.[19]
Kaladesh Inventions
Building on the success of the Zendikar Expeditions, Wizards of the Coast expanded the product in the Masterpiece Series.[20] For the Kaladesh Block they are called Kaladesh Inventions.[21] These are all premium foil cards with a special Kaladeshi card frame and a separate expansion symbol. Thus, they are not part of the set. Kaladesh Inventions are all artifacts, include all new art and flavor text set on Kaladesh, and appear slightly more often than premium mythic rares. These cards are playable in limited and formats where they're already legal. 30 Invention cards are appearing with Kaladesh and 24 more cards appearing in Aether Revolt.
Promotional Cards
- Prerelease: a stamped card that can be any rare or mythic rare from the set.
- Launch promo: Saheeli's Artistry
- Game Day: full-art Essence Extraction
- Game Day (Top 8): full-art Cultivator of Blades
- Buy-a-Box: Skyship Stalker
Holiday Buy-a-Box Promotion
As a holiday promotion, starting November 26, purchasers of a booster display box of Kaladesh received two bonus holiday packs.[22] These boosters contain:
- A premium card from a currently legal Standard set (excluding Oath of the Gatewatch and double-faced cards, but including Zendikar Expeditions and Kaladesh Inventions).
- Two non-premium cards that are either rare or a mythic rare from a Battle for Zendikar through Kaladesh.
This content is the same as that of the previously announced Standard Showdown packs.
Tokens and emblems
Kaladesh features 9 tokens and 3 emblems.[23]
- 6/6 Beast for Architect of the Untamed
- */* Construct for Metallurgic Summonings and Oviya Pashiri, Sage Lifecrafter
- */* Construct
- 1/1 Servo for any card with fabricate as well as Animation Module, Cogworker's Puzzleknot, Master Trinketeer and Oviya Pashiri, Sage Lifecrafter
- 1/1 Servo
- 1/1 Servo
- 1/1 Thopter with flying for Experimental Aviator, Pia Nalaar, Whirlermaker, Whirler Virtuoso
- 1/1 Thopter with flying
- 1/1 Thopter with flying
- Emblem for Chandra, Torch of Defiance
- Emblem for Nissa, Vital Force
- Emblem for Dovin Baan
Energy Reserve markers were inadvertently omitted from the initial print run of Kaladesh. They do appear in subsequent print runs,[24] such as Kaladesh boosters included in Aether Revolt prerelease packs.[25]
Misprints
Two cards exclusive to the Nissa Planeswalker Deck had their illustration credit swapped.
- Guardian of the Great Conduit — miscredited to Magali Villeneuve; it should be Christine Choi.
- Terrain Elemental — miscredited to Christine Choi; it should be Magali Villeneuve.
Themes and mechanics
Kaladesh is a set with less complexity than some of its recent predecessors.,[26][27][28] as there are only two new named mechanics:
- Crew — a keyword ability that enables vehicles to become artifact creatures until end of turn.[29] To activate the crew ability, tap any number of creatures you control with total power equal to or greater than the crew number. Because the crew ability doesn't use the tap symbol, you can tap any untapped creature you control, even one that just entered the battlefield. You can even tap an animated Vehicle to crew another Vehicle.
- Fabricate — When a creature with Fabricate enters the battlefield you may put that many +1/+1 counters on the creature, or create that 1/1 colorless Servo artifact creature tokens. The number after fabricate tells you how many +1/+1 counters or Servos you get.
There are no returning named mechanics (save evergreen ones).[30] However Inventors' Fair notably utilizes Metalcraft,[31] and Gearseeker Serpent has Affinity for artifacts.
Energy counters (marked with an ) are a new resource, placed on players in form of a counter.[32] They are used to pay the cost to activate abilities. Energy counters represent aether, magical energy that is found throughout the Multiverse, and is an integral part of the ecosystem on Kaladesh. Most cards that give you energy counters also give you a way to spend them. Energy counters that you get from one card can be saved up and spent on the abilities of other cards. Energy counters don't go away as phases or steps end, or as the turn ends. The only way for you to lose them is to spend them.
Kaladesh features the following limited archetypes:
- : Enter-the-Battlefield Triggers
- : Artifact Control
- : Artifact Aggro
- : Energy Beatdown
- : Fabricate Go-tall/Go-wide
- : Recursion
- : Energy & Artifacts
- : Fabricate Midrange
- : Vehicle Aggro
- : Energy Tempo
Card types
Kaladesh introduces the Vehicle artifact subtype, the Aetherborn, Pilot, and Servo creature types, as well as the Saheeli and Dovin planeswalker subtypes.
The set also reintroduces the Monkey creature type, which had been erased in the Ninth Edition.
Card frame
Vehicle cards have a special bronze and grey blocked card frame.[33]
Cycles
Kaladesh has seven cycles:
Cycle name | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gearhulks | Cataclysmic Gearhulk | Torrential Gearhulk | Noxious Gearhulk | Combustible Gearhulk | Verdurous Gearhulk |
Five mythic colored artifact with MM in their mana cost, each of which has a keyword ability and an Enter the battlefield effect. | |||||
Puzzleknots | Cogworker's Puzzleknot | Glassblower's Puzzleknot | Metalspinner's Puzzleknot | Fireforger's Puzzleknot | Woodweaver's Puzzleknot |
Five common colorless artifacts with a cost of , each of which has an enters the battlefield effect that can be repeated by spending 2M or 1M (depending on the knot) and sacrificing it. | |||||
Thriving creatures | Thriving Ibex | Thriving Turtle | Thriving Rats | Thriving Grubs | Thriving Rhino |
Five common creatures that enter the battlefield with two energy counters and may pay two energy counters to get a +1/+1 counter | |||||
Activated artifact creatures | Bastion Mastodon | Dukhara Peafowl | Prakhata Pillar-Bug | Weldfast Monitor | Narnam Cobra |
Five common artifact creatures that have an activated ability costing one colored mana that gives them a color-aligned keyword | |||||
Cycle name | |||||
Enemy-colored fast lands | Concealed Courtyard | Spirebluff Canal | Blooming Marsh | Inspiring Vantage | Botanical Sanctum |
A new set of enemy colored taplands was introduced, finishing the cycle started in Scars of Mirrodin |
Double cycles
Cycle name | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gold signpost uncommons | Cloudblazer | Contraband Kingpin | Unlicensed Disintegration | Voltaic Brawler | Engineered Might | Restoration Gearsmith | Whirler Virtuoso | Hazardous Conditions | Veteran Motorist | Empyreal Voyager |
Ten uncommon gold cards, each supporting a draft archetype. |
Mega cycle
ng the cycle started in Scars of MirrodinMega cycle
Cycle name | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rare color artifacts | Peacewalker Colossus (Aether Revolt) | Merchant's Dockhand (Aether Revolt) | Scrapheap Scrounger (Kaladesh ) | Bomat Courier (Kaladesh ) | Lifecrafter's Bestiary (Aether Revolt) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
}
Triplet
PairsKaladesh has one mirrored pair and one matched pair.
Reprinted cards
Uncommon to Common
Functional Reprints
Card comparisonsNotable cards
Banned and restricted cards
Preconstructed decksKaladesh has two planeswalker decks:
References
External links
|