CardName: Danger Mouse
Cost: WR
Type: Creature - Mouse Spy
Pow/Tgh: 2/2
Rules Text: First strike as long as you control a Hamster
Protection from Frogs and Vampires
{0}: Destroy target artifact creature.
Flavour Text:
Set/Rarity: Multiverse Design Challenge Rare
Danger Mouse
R
Creature – Mouse Spy
First strike as long as you control a Hamster
Protection from Frogs and Vampires
: Destroy target artifact creature.
Created for Challenge # 100 as an attempt at a Vitenka-style card for My Universe, My Rules. One thing Vitenka likes is his 80s cartoons. How would Vitenka design a Danger Mouse card? I can't really say, but maybe a bit like this. DM was never overcome by the evil Baron Greenback or Count Duckula, and was incredibly good at destroying robots without lifting a finger.
Let me tell you, I like Danger Mouse. But the accents on that show are completely unintelligent in the United States. How it became popular here, too, is a mystery to me (though, I'm guessing it had something to with the fact that any cartoon on Nickelodeon was bound to be a successful. A cable channel exclusively for children raised by television, with no competition? Automatic viewership. We never even questioned the fact that we were watching fifteen year old programming from Canada, England and France. I still have a soft spot for the Cities of Gold...)
Created for Challenge # 100 as an attempt at a Vitenka-style card for My Universe, My Rules. One thing Vitenka likes is his 80s cartoons. How would Vitenka design a Danger Mouse card? I can't really say, but maybe a bit like this. DM was never overcome by the evil Baron Greenback or Count Duckula, and was incredibly good at destroying robots without lifting a finger.
Let me tell you, I like Danger Mouse. But the accents on that show are completely unintelligent in the United States. How it became popular here, too, is a mystery to me (though, I'm guessing it had something to with the fact that any cartoon on Nickelodeon was bound to be a successful. A cable channel exclusively for children raised by television, with no competition? Automatic viewership. We never even questioned the fact that we were watching fifteen year old programming from Canada, England and France. I still have a soft spot for the Cities of Gold...)