The final drop celebrates one of Magic’s slithery-est creature types, with five of its most notable snakes reimagined by a bunch of different artists.Īmong the cards are Hexdrinker, whose ability to level up and gain protection from everything is incredibly powerful. That on its own is good ramp, but costing zero to cast also means it plays a part in Cheerios decks, Storm, any anything else that cares about you casting a free artifact spell. There’s also Sakashima the Impostor, whose ability to enter the battlefield as a copy of another permanent allows it to make use of all kinds of enters-the-battlefield effects.įinally, the only noncreature here is Paradise Mantle, which allows a creature to tap to produce any colour of mana. Every card here sees play in Commander, particularly the board-wipe-on-a-body Massacre Girl and go-to Aristocrats commander Teysa Karlov.Īzusa, Lost But Seeking is a a fantastic way of ramping ahead of your opponents (or just abusing the landfall mechanic for value). These five cards give us so much raw fashion, while also having probably the most consistent card quality in the entire superdrop. This time, we’re getting a Japanese urban twist on it, with Tsubonari’s City Styles. Secret Lair has been experimenting with fashion recently, with the October superdrop featuring Jack Hughes’ If Looks Could Kill.
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