x If you're looking for a specific comment, check the other printings as well.
Player Rating:
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0
Community Rating: 3.024 / 5  (41 votes)
The player rating is the overall rating for the card taking into account all player rating votes.

 
Popular Comments
Hide Comments
Only show me comments rated:
 stars.
12 >
I think this is not meant to slow a game down as you can tap all your mana before you play your land for the turn. It is more like an anti counterspell device.
Posted By: holgir (9/29/2009 2:23:44 AM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


Lock down the game with this and Winter Orb.
Posted By: nammertime (12/12/2009 1:16:22 AM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


Red: get all your shit out really fast. Then cap it with this while your blue opponent still has a handful of cards he wishes he could play, and your 5/5 dragons are beating him down.
Posted By: beerious (3/26/2011 2:20:50 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


This card is very situational, but I use it in a deck with a well of life and lot's of creatures that get stronger if I'm tapped out. (and downhill charge as surprise). In that deck it works really well and prevents countering quite often.
Posted By: RogerWilco (11/29/2009 7:53:29 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


Aaron's Random Card Comment of the Day #17, 10/19/10

I played three copies of this card in the sideboard of my mono-red aggro Standard deck at Worlds 2001. I don’t remember siding it in, and I certainly didn’t test sideboarded games back then, so I can’t really comment on how effective of a card it is. I’m guessing it wasn’t all that great, considering the only other instance I can find of someone using the card in constructed is my co-worker and former teammate Mike Turian, who played the exact same decklist I did at that very tournament. Mike made the Top 8; I did not.

Whether it actually was a good card, it appears to have been created to be one. In the R&D multiverse comments, a developer posed the question: “Is this too good of a control hoser?” No one answered him.

Tectonic Instability was made to hose control decks, specifically counterspell-heavy decks. Those decks thrive when they are making their land drops every turn, countering key spells and using instant c... (see all)
Posted By: Aaron_Forsythe (10/18/2010 11:38:49 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


@CatchoftheCentury: There's a place in the game for cards that you have to discover the value of, but as I understand "hoser" it's "extremely situational card that you board in against a particular matchup, but is useless else". If artifacts are the big thing, then you run artifact hate (Shatter instead of Terror, and as of MBS, Creeping Corrosion). If small cheap flying pests are all the rage, you run Windstorm. They're simple and obvious. If you're staring down the barrel of an FNM full of creatures with flying, you want to be able to go to Gatherer or your card collection and go "This is what I need in my deck". The more complicated cards are great for playing around with, but the simple ones are for filling obvious holes.
Posted By: Rosuav (6/4/2011 12:59:31 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


Use this in a deck that uses lots of cheap creatures and spells and you can really slow down your opponents.
Posted By: Silverware (8/29/2009 7:37:22 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


@Aaron: I've been reading your comments on each card and there are a few that I might agree on, and surely because I'm reading as a player not as a designer/developer, but I just had to respond to this one.

The biggest thing that bothers me is that you mention how FNMers might not get it right away and what-not, but I think this is why the card is so good. It is subtle, it rewards players for thinking outside the box, to do a bit of research... Magic may be a game, but when you are looking to get ahead, sometimes actively looking for answers like this card and find it, you feel good. You found a way to stop those annoying decks. The sense of discovery is applicable here. Discovering that gem in the pile of dust, your saving grace. That also has a lot of bearing.

Wasn't one of the intentions of Magic to be a sort of adventure? To give the game a sense of discovery? This plays right into that. I love cards with subtleties like these and I know a lot of people do. I'm not saying to ma... (see all)
Posted By: CatchoftheCentury (6/3/2011 8:14:31 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


@ Aaron:
Don't forget that there are abilities that support this strategy, see: Branded Brawlers. So this card gets in-line with: Stoneshaker Shaman, Citadel of Pain, etc.

What it means to be "tapped out" is obvious for the most players, even for those @ FNM. And once you have taught them to wait to cast their instants until the very last moment, they understand the rest very soon. And the frustration to play against a counter-deck is a moment everyone will have to go through as long as this kind of spell exist.

So even if you've written a reminder on this card (that player can't use tapped lands on any other turn), you wouldn't have changed a thing. So for me, this card is quite perfect. The only thing I would change is the concept of when the mana pool is emptied or to put more effort into explaining this concept to new players.
Posted By: Cheza (6/4/2011 12:08:45 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 


This plus Winter Orb plus green's mana creatures equals RUG lockdown.
Posted By: bay_falconer (6/8/2011 4:17:15 PM)
Rating: 
0.51.01.52.02.53.03.54.04.55.0

 




We have updated our privacy policy. Click the link to learn more.

Gatherer works better in the Companion app!

Continue