Not worth space in your deck. Even in a clash deck, it's hard to justify not abandoning this and putting something better in its place.
Posted By:
Treima
(5/8/2009 8:26:21 AM)
Magus of the Future has pretty much made this obsolete, though I admit it's an old card anyways. Call of the Wild anyone?
Posted By:
Lege
(10/20/2009 11:03:16 PM)
The flavor text is definately remnant from the time when this was: Each player turns their library upside down and play from the bottom (which is the new top).
The way I understand is that it was changed because upside down library accidentaly reveals too much of the deck order.
Definately a card that can be used as a basis of a deck.
Posted By:
tavaritz
(5/9/2011 11:10:10 AM)
DO WE HAVE A LEARNING DISABILITY HERE?
Posted By:
Kryptnyt
(10/17/2011 12:49:23 PM)
Trivia: Field of Dreams was called "Reverse Gravity" in playtesting and caused players to "turn their libraries upside down and draw the card that is showing" and had a cost of {3}{W}. It inspired the creation of Think Tank.
Posted By:
Nikeyeia
(2/20/2012 5:27:03 AM)
I don't think it's totally outclassed. As an enchantment it's a bit harder to remove... and now with everyone running Artifact removal coming out of mirrodin it's quite tough...
Of course the reason you would play it seems to be a bit missed in this crowed:
It shows you your opponent's deck. In a mill deck you can basically choose what they draw next...
Posted By:
Zoah
(5/1/2012 1:16:49 PM)
Worth considering in monoblue Commander. At some point, several players will be topdecking--then you can get the most out of each counterspell in your hand. Weirdly useful in killing other people's Enchant World cards too. Living Plane shenanigans are probably not your biggest concern, but Concordant Crossroads can be a brutal beating.
Posted By:
Salient
(12/12/2012 12:01:05 PM)