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| Cactuar card art |
Time for Card Talk! Reminder how this works:
- I go to Scryfall and select 'Random Card'
- I present and blog about the card. I could discuss any aspect: the art, abilities, cost, set, impact on the game, and so on. Stream of consciousness.
Card Talk is a fun, uncurated way to look at Magic's cards, mechanics, history, art, sets, and so on. And of course it exposes some of my own preferences, biases, and memories of the game.
Today's card is . . .
Today's card is . . .
You Find the Villains' Lair—a common instant from Adventures in the Forgotten Realms.
The first thing I notice here is grammar (the apostrophe in Villains' Lair). In modern times we've gotten sloppy grammatically, but Wizards does a good job with the grammar on Magic cards (and sometimes, such precision aids in rules clarity).This card has a modal ability. From the official rules,
700.2. A spell or ability is modal if it has two or more options in a bulleted list preceded by instructions for a player to choose a number of those options, such as “Choose one —.” Each of those options is a mode. Modal cards printed prior to the Khans of Tarkir™ set didn’t use bulleted lists for the modes; these cards have received errata in the Oracle card reference so the modes do appear in a bulleted list.
Modal cards are powerful because they give options. Here, you can either counter target spell or draw two cards, then discard two cards. Most games will have situations where one (or both) is desired, making this a useful spell indeed. Sometimes, such flexibility results in a higher mana value, but here, three mana is perfectly reasonable for either mode.
This card also has flavor words (Foil Their Scheme and Learn Their Secrets).
207.2d Similar to ability words, flavor words appear in italics at the beginning of some abilities. Flavor words provide a flavorful description of abilities, but they have no special rules meaning and are not listed in the Comprehensive Rules. While an ability word ties together several abilities with similar functionality, each flavor word is tailored to the specific ability it appears with.
Flavor words featured heavily on cards in this set. Speaking of . . . Adventures in the Forgotten Realms was released in July 2021 and a foray into the Dungeons & Dragons world, making it one of Wizards' earlier Universes Beyond sets. I really enjoyed both the flavor and mechanics of this release, and I missed it when it rotated out of Standard.
Until next time . . . keep exploring.





























































