Cumulative upkeep
Cumulative Upkeep | |
---|---|
Keyword Ability | |
Type | Triggered |
Introduced |
Arabian Nights (mechanic) Ice Age (keyword) |
Last used | Coldsnap |
Reminder Text | Cumulative upkeep [cost] (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.) |
Storm Scale | 10[1] |
Statistics |
86 cards 17.4% 29.1% 12.8% 9.3% 20.9% 3.5% 4.7% 2.3% |
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. The cost is based on the number of age counters on the permanent.
History
Cumulative upkeep was introduced in Ice Age, reused in Alliances and returned in Mirage block. It returned briefly in Coldsnap, to maintain that set's continuity with Ice Age.[2][3] The mechanic was also considered for one of the Doctor Who Commander decks.[4] Through Ice Age and Alliances, Cumulative upkeep was mostly used on enchantments that cause a locking effect on the game, which were flavorfully difficult to maintain and often left little trace after the enchantment was sacrificed. One of the most complex commons in the game, Balduvian Shaman, had Cumulative upkeep as part of its text. In Weatherlight, designed experimented with non-mana and nonlife costs, as well as age counter-based effects. Coldsnap introduced functional hybrid mana costs, as well as a cost that had no cap (flipping a coin, on Karplusan Minotaur), with its "cost" being its other associated abilities.
Rules
From the glossary of the Comprehensive Rules (June 7, 2024—Modern Horizons 3)
- Cumulative Upkeep
- A keyword ability that imposes an increasing cost to keep a permanent on the battlefield. See rule 702.24, “Cumulative Upkeep.”
From the Comprehensive Rules (June 7, 2024—Modern Horizons 3)
- 702.24. Cumulative Upkeep
- 702.24a Cumulative upkeep is a triggered ability that imposes an increasing cost on a permanent. “Cumulative upkeep [cost]” means “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.” If [cost] has choices associated with it, each choice is made separately for each age counter, then either the entire set of costs is paid, or none of them is paid. Partial payments aren’t allowed.
Example: A creature has “Cumulative upkeep {W} or {U}” and two age counters on it. When its ability next triggers and resolves, the creature’s controller puts an age counter on it and then may pay {W}{W}{W}, {W}{W}{U}, {W}{U}{U}, or {U}{U}{U} to keep the creature on the battlefield.
Example: A creature has “Cumulative upkeep—Sacrifice a creature” and one age counter on it. When its ability next triggers and resolves, its controller can’t choose the same creature to sacrifice twice. Either two different creatures must be sacrificed, or the creature with cumulative upkeep must be sacrificed.
- 702.24b If a permanent has multiple instances of cumulative upkeep, each triggers separately. However, the age counters are not connected to any particular ability; each cumulative upkeep ability will count the total number of age counters on the permanent at the time that ability resolves.
Example: A creature has two instances of “Cumulative upkeep—Pay 1 life.” The creature has no age counters, and both cumulative upkeep abilities trigger. When the first ability resolves, the controller adds a counter and then chooses to pay 1 life. When the second ability resolves, the controller adds another counter and then chooses to pay an additional 2 life.
- 702.24a Cumulative upkeep is a triggered ability that imposes an increasing cost on a permanent. “Cumulative upkeep [cost]” means “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.” If [cost] has choices associated with it, each choice is made separately for each age counter, then either the entire set of costs is paid, or none of them is paid. Partial payments aren’t allowed.
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 " 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 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
Example 1
Uktabi Efreet
Creature — Efreet
5/4
Cumulative upkeep (At the beginning of your upkeep, put an age counter on this permanent, then sacrifice it unless you pay its upkeep cost for each age counter on it.)
Example 2
Inner Sanctum
Enchantment
Cumulative upkeep — Pay 2 life. (At the beginning of your upkeep, put an age counter on this permanent, then sacrifice it unless you pay its upkeep cost for each age counter on it.)
Prevent all damage that would be dealt to creatures you control.
Enchantments that impose Cumulative upkeep
- Mana Chains (Cost: )
- Decomposition (Cost: 1 life)
- Breath of Dreams (Cost: )
- Dreams of the Dead (Cost: )
References
- ↑ Mark Rosewater (November 21, 2023). "My question: where is cumulative upkeep on the storm scale?". Blogatog. Tumblr.
- ↑ Aaron Forsythe (July 07, 2006). "A Walk Through the Cold". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Magic Arcana (July 10, 2006). "A New Age of Age Counters". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.
- ↑ Gavin Verhey (October 10, 2023). "Designing 'Magic: The Gathering - Doctor Who". magicthegathering.com. Wizards of the Coast.