Storm

From MTG Wiki
Revision as of 17:41, 9 August 2021 by 174.205.32.144 (talk) (Removed the incorrect statement that you do not count spells cast from zones other than your hand, or spells that were countered when determining storm count.)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Storm
Keyword Ability
Type Triggered
Introduced Scourge
Last used Modern Horizons 2
Reminder Text Storm (When you cast this spell, copy it for each spell cast before it this turn. You may choose new targets for the copies.)
Storm Scale 10by definition, see storm scale
Statistics
26 cards
{W} 7.7% {U} 23.1% {B} 7.7% {R} 42.3% {G} 19.2%
Scryfall Search
keyword:"copy it for each spell cast before it this turn"

Storm is a keyword ability that creates a copy of the spell for each spell cast before it in the current turn.

History

The first cards with Storm were printed in Scourge, with more being printed in Time Spiral, one in Commander (Flusterstorm) and one in Unstable (Crow Storm). Thousand-Year Storm from Guilds of Ravnica is an enchantment that gives its controller's instants and sorceries a modified version of storm.

Storm also appeared in Modern Horizons.[1] In the Mystery Booster set it appeared on a test card. This was the first time it was used on an Enchantment. Three cards with Storm appear in the Mystical Archive, and in Strixhaven: School of Mages, the card Show of Confidence has a function very similar to Storm, however it only deals with Instants and Sorceries. Aeve, Progenitor Ooze from Modern Horizons 2 is the first black-border permanent with storm and the first creature.[2] All copies become token copies of the creature.

Rules

From the glossary of the Comprehensive Rules (June 7, 2024—Modern Horizons 3)

Storm
A keyword ability that creates copies of a spell. See rule 702.40, “Storm.”

From the Comprehensive Rules (June 7, 2024—Modern Horizons 3)

  • 702.40. Storm
    • 702.40a Storm is a triggered ability that functions on the stack. “Storm” means “When you cast this spell, copy it for each other spell that was cast before it this turn. If the spell has any targets, you may choose new targets for any of the copies.”
    • 702.40b If a spell has multiple instances of storm, each triggers separately.

Rulings

  • The storm copies are put directly onto the stack—they aren't cast. That means the copies don't generate storm copies themselves, and they aren't counted by other storm spells cast later during the turn.
  • For the same reason, an effect like Twincast or Beamsplitter Mage, which can copy a spell with storm, will only create one new spell. The copy's storm ability will not trigger because the spell was not cast.
  • Each storm spell with a target allows you to change the target for each copy of that spell. You make that choice for each copy individually.
  • A copy of a spell can be countered, just like any other spell, but each copy has to be countered individually. Countering a storm spell won't counter the copies of it.
  • Exiling a card using suspend doesn't count as casting a spell; you only cast a suspended card when you remove the last time counter from it and that ability resolves.

Example

Example

Grapeshot {1}{R}
Sorcery
Grapeshot deals 1 damage to any target.
Storm (When you cast this spell, copy it for each spell cast before it this turn. You may choose new targets for the copies.)

Notable cards with storm

  • Tendrils of Agony — Used in Vintage and Legacy storm decks as the main win condition
  • Empty the Warrens — Used in Vintage, Legacy, and Modern storm decks as the main/alternate win condition and banned in Pauper
  • Brain Freeze — Used in Legacy storm decks as the main win condition when used with High Tide
  • Mind's Desire — Used in Vintage storm decks with Tendrils of Agony as the win condition
  • Grapeshot — Used in Modern storm decks as the main win condition and banned in Pauper
  • Dragonstorm — Used in Ravnica/Coldsnap/Time Spiral Standard storm decks
  • Flusterstorm — A counterspell with storm used in Legacy decks
  • Temporal Fissure - Previous used in Pauper storm decks as the main win condition before its banning

Storm scale

Mark Rosewater has declared that he doesn't ever see storm coming back in a Standard-legal set. On Blogatog, he uses the Storm Scale—a scale of 1 through 10 where 10 is storm—when he answers questions about the likelihood of the return of a mechanic in a Standard-legal set.[3][4][5] 1 = will definitely see again; 10 = never say never, but this is pretty close to never. The Storm Scale does not affect the reprinting of cards in supplemental sets such as Modern Masters and the Magic Online-only set Vintage Masters. It also didn't prevent the creation of Crow Storm in the silver-bordered set Unstable[6] or of Krosan Adaptation as a Mystery Booster test card.

References