Innistrad: Midnight Hunt/Trivia: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
>Hunterofsalvation (→Other) |
>Neoheart No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
|sub2 = Card comparisons | |sub2 = Card comparisons | ||
|sub3 = Trivia | |sub3 = Trivia | ||
|sub4 = Art series | |||
}} | }} | ||
==Maro's Midnight Hunt teaser== | ==Maro's Midnight Hunt teaser== |
Revision as of 18:09, 16 September 2021
Mark Rosewater gave his traditional teaser with the following hints.[1]
First up, here are some things you can expect:
- three popular mechanics previously seen on Innistrad return — Flashback, Transform, and Investigate.
- a new drawback for creature tokens that lets us create them cheaper — Decayed
- a white card that could potentially draw you a card each turn — Sigarda's Splendor
- a popular Innistrad card gets reprinted — Delver of Secrets
- a curse that transforms into a creature — Curse of Leeches (Leeching Lurker)
- two permanents that can double something every turn — Unnatural Growth (Power/Toughness), Angelic Enforcer(Life total)
- a mythic cycle with “you may pay [COST] any number of times” — Bloodthirsty Adversary, Intrepid Adversary, Primal Adversary Spectral Adversary, Tainted Adversary
- a four mana blue aura with “You control enchanted creature.” — Grafted Identity
- A popular tournament card in multiple formats gets reprinted with its fifth piece of art. — Pithing Needle
- a character from Innistrad once mentioned in a short story finally gets a card in an Innistrad set — Liesa, Forgotten Archangel
Here are snippets of rules text, you’ll see:
- “If your life total would be reduced to 0 or less,” — Enduring Angel
- “This spell costs 1 less to cast for each creature you attacked with this turn.” — Search Party Captain
- “As [CARDNAME] enters the battlefield, note your life total.” — Sigarda's Splendor
- “put a slime counter on up to one other target creature.” — Sludge Monster
- “Creature tokens you control lose all abilities and have base power and toughness 3/3.” — Poppet Factory
- “Each instant and sorcery card in your graveyard has” — Lier, Disciple of the Drowned
- “Instants and sorcery spells you cast cost X less to cast, where X is [CARDNAME]’s power.” — Vadrik, Astral Archmage
- “put that many +1/+1 counters on [CARDNAME], then create twice that many 2/2 black Zombie creature tokens” — Tainted Adversary
- “At the beginning of your end step, if you have exactly 13 life,” — Jerren, Corrupted Bishop
- “You may cast any number of the copies without paying their mana costs.” — Bloodthirsty Adversary
And finally, here are some creature type lines you’ll see:
- Creature – Hippogriff Spirit — Soul-Guide Gryff and Waildrifter
- Creature – Human Soldier Werewolf — Brutal Cathar
- Creature – Dragon Egg — Smoldering Egg
- Creature – Leech Horror — Leeching Lurker
- Creature – Fungus Horror — Deathbonnet Hulk
- Creature – Plant Horror — Rootcoil Creeper
- Creature – Drake Horror — Storm Skreelix
- Creature – Demon Dog — Dreadhound
- Legendary Creature - Ooze — Slogurk, the Overslime
- Legendary Creature – Vampire Noble — Florian, Voldaren Scion
Other
- Croaking Counterpart is a play on Cackling Counterpart (Innistrad). It seems to be copying Rem Karolus, Stalwart Slayer.
- Faithful Mending is a mirror to Faithless Looting.
- Waildrifter has a confurcated maw similar to Wretched Gryff, despite Emrakul's influence being lessened.
- The art and card name of Can't Stay Away seems to be inspired by The Cat Came Back, a comic song written by Harry S. Miller.
- The art of Rotten Reunion takes reference from American Gothic, a painting by Grant Wood.[2]
- While Innistrad used 19th century Gothic horror and Shadows over Innistrad used early-20th century Eldritch horror literature, Midnight Hunt used more mid-to-late 20th century horror films.[2]
- Fleshtaker is inspired by the Slasher movie genre.[3]
- Heirloom Mirror could refer to the Candyman series of films, though the folklore goes back to the Bloody Mary legend.
- Phantom Carriage refers to the 1928 film of the same name.[2]
- The Meathook Massacre refers to the Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise.[2]
- Consuming Blob refers to the 1958 film The Blob.[2]
- Rise of the Ants refers to the 1954 film Them!.[2]
References
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (August 30, 2021). "Maro's Midnight Hunt Teaser". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ a b c d e f Ethan Fleischer (September 11, 2021). "Innistrad: Midnight Hunt card-by-card thread!". Twitter.
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (September 10, 2021). "Whats the logic for slasher movie serial killers...". Blogatog. Tumblr.