

Its explosive potential has made Panharmonicon one of the cards I've built decks around the most. However, if you do untap with a Panharmonicon on the battlefield, you're going to have a really good turn. There's a good chance you'll just die before you untap. Taking off Turn 4 in a format like Modern is tough. In other formats, Panharmonicon is typically too slow for top-tier decks. If you're playing a Commander like Roon of the Hidden Realm, Yarok, the Desecrated, or Gonti, Lord of Luxury, Panharmonicon will almost always not just find its way into your deck but be absurdly powerful in your deck. While it isn't quite an ultra-staple like Sol Ring is, it is one of the 30-ish most played colorless cards in the format, showing up in all kinds of decks, including enters-the-battlefield focused decks. $ 0.00 $ 0.00 $ 0.00 $ 0.00 $ 0.00 $ 0.00Ĭurrently, the most common home for Panharmonicon is on Commander tables. Basically, it's everything about Magic I love all wrapped up into a four-mana artifact. While the artifact has never really been a tournament staple (outside of a very brief few weeks in Standard before Reflector Mage was banned), it's a really fun, durdly, value-centric card that also has the potential to enable weird combos. That's right! Panharmonicon is back and looking better than ever with its old-school brown border! If you've followed me for any amount of time, you'll know there are only a few things in Magic that I love more than old-border cards, and Panharmonicon is high on the list. Well, today, thanks to the awesomeness of Wizards, I've got a couple of sweet Time Spiral Remastered preview cards to show off for you, including the most important old-border reprint in the set. I can't even really explain why I'm such a big fan of old borders. I'm a huge, huge old-border fan, to the point where I often don't play a version of a card with art that I like just because it's in the new border. While having more reprints is always a good thing, the main reason I've been counting down the days until Time Spiral Remastered spoiler season is the old-border reprints. I’m sure this’ll please the Depths fans as they get to add this gorgeous looking card.While we've gotten a lot of sweet sets and cards lately and it seems like a bunch more are on the horizon, one of the sets I've been most excited about on the 2021 Magic calendar is Time Spiral Remastered. … And there you have it! Three interesting black preview cards of varying Constructed pedigree across Magic’s history, and draft potential. I’ve been gushing about this card in Constructed, but I’m also interested to see how good this card is going to be in draft! It’s a pretty respectable body on 2, but I’ll be keeping my eyes for any potential combos with its ability. Its combo potential with Dark Depths is well-documented, but don’t overlook its ability to (almost) cleanly take out a planeswalker or brawl in combat! It has quite the pedigree in Legacy, ranging from GB which Depths has been a competitive archetype for a long time, an old fan favourite and colorfully named Ice Station Zebra (Tin Fins + Depth comb), and recently noted Legacy crusher Negator77 took home the MTGO Legacy trophy crown with a very innovative “Rainbow” Depths (BUG with rainbow lands for permission, Stifle, and to turn off opposing Submerge)! Just goes to show you that the Hexmage combo package is so lean and robust there’s room for creativity. Vampire Hexmage! This has been a defining pillar of Legacy for a long time and a big part of why Dark Depths is banned in Modern. As a recent converted fanatic of draft, I’ve seen that WOTC has done a fantastic job with great, replayable draft formats over the last few years, so I have high faith that WOTC has curated the set to be an exciting, unique draft experience!ĭon’t be assuming that we’re only bringing you draft-calibre cards though! Read on and you’ll see a pretty good draft card, a key role-player in Modern’s past, and even a beloved Eternal staple. What is pretty interesting to me is that the Time Spiral block has been regarded as some of the more complex and interesting sets across time due to all the returning mechanics. As a newer player to the game, my understanding is that the Time Spiral block was a truly unique, one-of-a-kind experience, so I’m excited to relive the excitement through the remastered edition! Time Spiral initially evoked a lot of nostalgia and brought forth numerous now-iconic cards and Eternal format staples. Hello friends, Finalnub here and I’m excited to bring to you all not one, not two, but three previews for Time Spiral Remastered for Face to Face Games!
