Hopefully, for those so inclined, you were able to F5 your way to a leftover San Diego Comic-Con promo on Hasbro's website. It's that and the yet-unreleased From the Vaults: Lore that I'd like to talk about today, so let's get right to it!
SDCC 2016
For the fourth straight year, Hasbro has produced an exclusive set of planeswalkers available for purchase by Comic-Con attendees (holding a few back for us peons that can't attend in person, for sale at a later date some time after the convention). The last three years, while we've had a core set, we've seen the black-on-black foil sets. Players had a fair number of criticisms about these, the most significant being that they're difficult to read under certain lighting conditions and that they're so exclusive that some of them wind up being beyond the financial means of some Magic players.
This year, Hasbro has addressed these two concerns in particular. While I feel that addressed them mostly to collect hundred-dollar bills from players themselves than to allow resellers to collect larger sums while preying upon those that can't attend, we can't deny that the new sets are at least more abundant than in prior years. A slightly wider availability (created by printing more sets) solved the problem of relative scarcity. Additionally, rather than print them in the traditional black-on-black, WotC had artist Eric DesChamps create a panoramic art of zombie planeswalkers from over the last few sets.
While I feel that Wizards missed the boat, so to speak, on the "zombie craze" of some five years ago (World War Z, The Walking Dead, Zombieland, etc.), the art is thematically appropriate to the current block, and offers up an interesting "what if." What if Liliana turned on her new comrades, or had simply allowed them to die? What does this mean? Can undead hold a planeswalker spark after all? What does this mean for Venser on New Phyrexia? So many questions! What are Liliana's intentions?
The main let down would be the "From the Vaults" foiling process. While the set's specific process differs from FTV in a few small ways (there's an emphasis on certain details, for example, rather than the entire surface of the card being a rainbow mess), and it doesn't hamper the legibility of the card in the way the SDCC foiling process of the past has, I feel that either a nonfoil set (gasp!) or a more traditional foiling process would have better served the process.
That art, tho.
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From left: Gideon, Ally of Zendikar; Jace, Unraveler of Secrets; Liliana, the Last Hope; Chandra, Flamecaller; Nissa, Voice of Zendikar |
From the Vaults: Lore
This set is a high point in the series, for me. A number of Commander playables, and overall, pretty solid lore-related choices, for the Vorthos folks in the crowd.
At a glance, it appears that from Urza's block onward, we get one card per block, up to the original Innistrad. For some choices, Wizards seemed to take a more holistic approach to the block than print strictly key moments and figures from the story, as with Phyrexian Processor. That was the goal of Phyrexia, but they implied the evil nature of Yawgmoth through the choice of this artifact rather than
something more specific, like, say Attrition or Defense of the Heart. I can get behind the choice, as the card is mechanically a flavour home run, and is a pretty good Commander card. Same with Tolaria West; it was never visited in the story, but it helped to demonstrate the lasting impact of the Phyrexian Invasion. Likewise with Beseech the Queen. Oona herself already saw print in a From the Vaults (Legends), but this card in particular helps us gain the sense that she's this all-powerful being that people pray to and call upon for aid. Near-Death Experience sums up Zendikar nicely, in one neat phrase. Cabal Ritual, similar to Phyrexian Processor, illustrates the evil of the block's "big bad" in a similar fashion, by illustrating the casual evil the Cabal is capable of. Mind's Desire shows us the power of the Mirari, capable of both granting wishes and ruining lives, in about equal measure.
Then there were a few that illustrate key moments. Obliterate, with its correct flavour text restored, makes an appearance, illustrating Barrin's destruction of Tolaria to prevent it from falling into Phyrexian hands after the death of his wife and daughter. Unmask is Volrath being found out as he shapeshifts into Takara. Conflux represents Bolas gaining back a huge portion of his power as Alara recombines into one world from five.
The last six cards are evenly split between people and places/things. Memnarch demonstrates the power of the original Mirrodin block. Glissa in her tragic state, shows us the influence of Phyrexia, having undergone a transformation from heroine to monster while she slumbered in Mirrodin's core. Among the people, Momir Vig is the odd pick here. Why him? He's powerful, and was involved in the last book, Dissension, as the primary antagonist. But why him over Agrus Kos, the hero of the block? Kos isn't terribly appealing, true, but Momir Vig remains a "miss" for me, personally. The guy didn't do anything for me, and each novel in the trilogy dealt with some doomsday or another, so by the time Vig got his turn, people were like, "...meh?"
And now, we get to meat of the financial value of the box (read: the reason you likely won't find this for MSRP). Apart from the Helvault, the bulk of the reason things went sideways on Innistrad, we have two high-value cards (and a bonus foil Token!). Umezawa's Jitte might not tell much of Kamigawa's story, but this magical weapon, serving as an instrument of focus for the block protagonist, Toshiro Umezawa, is one of a few factors that brings us to modern Magic lore as we know it. Boom. Toshiro is the ancestor of Tetsuo (printed in Legends), the man who defeated Nicol Bolas, trapping him for centuries. Upon his release by Venser of Urborg, Bolas has had a claw in every major scheme to date, it seems. Thanks, Toshi, for pissing of the Myojin of Night's Reach and dooming us all to eternal torment.
I thought I'd save the very best for the very last.
Dark. Depths.
I love this card.
It makes it into the set representing Coldsnap (and by extension, Ice Age block), which it does in no way whatsoever. We were deliberately left in the dark (heh) about who or what Marit Lage was exactly, why she/it/whatever was imprisoned, or even where the specific place of her burial is (apart from "on Dominaria"). So we know that Marit Lage is worshipped (by examining cards like Wrath of Marit Lage), that it's very powerful, and that it's frozen. In this magic ice.
For some reason.
This mystery has captivated players and sparked much discussion. With Thing in the Ice in Shadows over Innistrad, people were left wondering if Marit Lage was who Nahiri was calling. No one knew, and to this day, no one does.
The new token's flavour text (<3) seems to suggest that Marit Lage is Dominaria's (Magic's?) Cthulu.
Interesting.
So, on the whole, these are fine choices for this From the Vaults. Momir Vig was a miss for me, but he's a fun Commander (RIP Prophet of Kruphix) whose foil price was getting a bit high. So, maybe I can give him a pass here. Lots of Commander playables (and a couple playbles in Legacy!), and if you can find it for MSRP, I'd give it serious consideration.
SDC-See You Later! ...Oh, Lore'd
That's all from me, let me know if you've got questions or suggestions! See you next week!