Cumulative upkeep

From MTG Wiki
Revision as of 02:05, 21 June 2015 by >Corveroth (The rules are immediately below, and neither card is more than similar to the mechanic. Removing this paragraph)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Cumulative upkeep
Keyword Ability
Type Triggered
Introduced Ice Age
Last used Coldsnap
Reminder Text Cumulative upkeep (At the beginning of your upkeep, if this permanent is on the battlefield, put an age counter on this permanent. Then you may pay (cost) for each age counter on it. If you don’t, sacrifice it.)
Statistics 86 cards
{U}29% {G}21% {W}17% {B}13% {R}9%
Artifact 5%, Multicolor 3%, Land 2%
Scryfall Search
keyword:"Cumulative upkeep"

Cumulative upkeep is a keyword ability on permanents that requires the permanent's controller to pay an increasing cost each turn, or else sacrifice that permanent. Cumulative upkeep was introduced in Ice Age and was used until Weatherlight. It returned briefly in Coldsnap, to maintain that set's continuity with Ice Age.[1][2]

Rules

Lua error in Module:CR at line 549: Unknown error, multiple lookups .

Rulings

  • Paying cumulative upkeep is always optional. If it's not paid, the permanent with cumulative upkeep is sacrificed. Partial payments of the total cumulative upkeep cost can't be made. For example, if a permanent with "cumulative upkeep {1}" has three age counters on it when its cumulative upkeep ability triggers, it gets another age counter and then its controller chooses to either pay {4} or sacrifice the permanent.
  • Examples of choices associated with cumulative upkeep costs include choosing an opponent, choosing a creature, choosing a color of mana, choosing a graveyard, and choosing "heads" or "tails" when flipping a coin. Each choice within a single payment is made independently. The entire set of choices must be legal and payable.
  • Some permanents have abilities that trigger when their cumulative upkeep is paid. These abilities trigger when an entire upkeep payment is made. They don't trigger once per individual cost payment.
  • Several cards with cumulative upkeep do something based on the number of age counters on them when they're put into a graveyard from play. For example, Arctic Nishoba says "When Arctic Nishoba is put into a graveyard from play, you gain 2 life for each age counter on it." That ability triggers no matter how the Nishoba is put into a graveyard from play. If you don't pay its cumulative upkeep and have to sacrifice it, it gets an age counter first, which impacts the amount of life you gain.
  • Note that the decision to track cumulative upkeep using counters was made when the "Sixth Edition rules" (and the original version of the Oracle card database) were released in 1999. The Coldsnap set is the first since that time to feature cumulative upkeep cards, so this may appear to some players to be a rules change.

Examples

Enchantments that impose Cumulative upkeep


References

  1. Aaron Forsythe (July 07, 2006). "A Walk Through the Cold". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
  2. Magic Arcana (July 10, 2006). "A New Age of Age Counters". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.