CardName: Plumebreaker
Cost: 3U
Type: Sorcery
Pow/Tgh: /
Rules Text: Destroy target land. Up to one target creature you control
gains flying until end of turn.
Flavour Text:
Set/Rarity: Multiverse Design Challenge Common
Plumebreaker
C
Sorcery
Destroy target land. Up to one target creature you control gains flying until end of turn.
For Challenge # 095. I'm giving land destruction to blue, for two reasons. First, it makes flavor sense to imagine the seas constantly breaking up and reclaiming land (as seen on the laughably bad card, Erosion). Two, Blue is about denial. And it makes sense, to me, to have blue directly deny players access to their mana sources. Oh, and I have a third reason, too: I like how it mirrors Green. Green is all about overgrowing and having more land than everyone else. Blue also likes to have more land than everyone else... with LD, though, it can actually do something about it, and fight Green, land for land.
Off the principal that there are no 3-cost LD spells nowadays, I looked to Demolish as the standard. In theory, I guess that means this should have been 'modal LD or Unsummon at sorcery speed'... but I guess I just thought this was more interesting. Maybe not core material, though. Don't know.
For Challenge # 095. I'm giving land destruction to blue, for two reasons. First, it makes flavor sense to imagine the seas constantly breaking up and reclaiming land (as seen on the laughably bad card, Erosion). Two, Blue is about denial. And it makes sense, to me, to have blue directly deny players access to their mana sources. Oh, and I have a third reason, too: I like how it mirrors Green. Green is all about overgrowing and having more land than everyone else. Blue also likes to have more land than everyone else... with LD, though, it can actually do something about it, and fight Green, land for land.
Off the principal that there are no 3-cost LD spells nowadays, I looked to Demolish as the standard. In theory, I guess that means this should have been 'modal LD or Unsummon at sorcery speed'... but I guess I just thought this was more interesting. Maybe not core material, though. Don't know.