Alright, you have a whole mess of small creatures and your opponent is looming over you with an army of 3+ power fatties. Now in your best interests... you want to lose the coin flip on Puppet's Verdict. Your goal is to fail it. After the coin is flipped, it comes out under what your opponent called... so you "lost" the flip.
Or did you?
Posted By:
Kirbster
(10/27/2010 3:16:41 PM)
Stone-Cold Basilisk, Vile Bile, and Smart Ass have a power greater than 2 but less than 3, and are immune to either result of Puppet's Verdict. Since Verdict feels like an Unhinged card anyway, why not go the whole 9 1/2 yards?
Posted By:
Ideatog
(11/29/2011 3:07:51 PM)
I think this is the only card with a coin flipping mechanic that actually has art depicting someone flipping a coin
Posted By:
monkeymonk42
(9/25/2011 7:51:28 PM)
I agree with Kirbster. Chances are, the "lost" effect is the one you want. Gobbos (or Kobolds, if you're going old school) is the only type of deck which would pump out large amount of creatures. Most high power die at the end of turn anyways, or have some equally negative downside. If you think of dragons, usually, you only have one or two because the others eat their kill spells. And if you're playing a field wipe, you're already down on your luck. But anyways, it's all semantics. It will work the same either way it's worded.
Posted By:
OmegaSerris
(9/15/2011 12:54:46 PM)
This is pretty good creature kill with Krark's thumb, but those decks are really luck-based in the end.
Posted By:
shady-tradesman
(10/28/2009 9:15:41 PM)
One star for being a Magic card.
Posted By:
qk1
(10/24/2013 5:53:47 PM)
Horrid art.
Posted By:
NeoKoda
(11/6/2011 5:20:34 PM)
@ monkeymonk42:
actually, there is also Game of Chaos...
Posted By:
leomistico
(5/27/2013 1:31:25 PM)