Weatherlight: Difference between revisions
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== Storyline == |
== Storyline == |
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''Weatherlight'' began the longest story arc in Magic's history, which would last continuously until the release of ''[[Apocalypse (Magic: The Gathering)|Apocalypse]]'' four years later (the aftermath of the story was explored for two years afterward). The story introduces the crew of the flying ship ''Weatherlight'', which traverses the planes of the [[Parallel universe (fiction)|multiverse]] in search of the scattered group of ancient artifacts known collectively as the Legacy. The captain of the ship, [[List of characters in Magic: The Gathering: S#Sisay|Sisay]], is abducted to the shadowy world of [[Rath (Magic plane)|Rath]], and her old friend and crewmate, a former Benalish soldier named [[Gerrard Capashen|Gerrard]], is pressed into taking command of the ship to rescue her. |
''Weatherlight'' began the longest story arc in Magic's history, which would last continuously until the release of ''[[Apocalypse (Magic: The Gathering)|Apocalypse]]'' four years later (the aftermath of the story was explored for two years afterward). The story introduces the crew of the flying ship ''Weatherlight'', which traverses the planes of the [[Parallel universe (fiction)|multiverse]] in search of the scattered group of ancient artifacts known collectively as the Legacy. The captain of the ship, [[List of characters in Magic: The Gathering: S#Sisay|Sisay]], is abducted to the shadowy world of [[Rath (Magic plane)|Rath]], and her old friend and crewmate, a former Benalish soldier named [[Gerrard Capashen|Gerrard]], is pressed into taking command of the ship to rescue her. |
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[[Image:Weatherlight-small.png]] |
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== Set history == |
== Set history == |
Revision as of 16:59, 13 July 2009
Released | June 1997 | |||
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Size | 167 cards | |||
Keywords | Flanking, Phasing, Cumulative Upkeep | |||
Mechanics | Graveyard matters | |||
Development code | Mochalette | |||
Expansion code | WTH | |||
Third set in the Mirage Block block | ||||
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Weatherlight is the nineteenth Magic: The Gathering set and eleventh expert level set, third and last in the Mirage Block. It was released in June 1997. Its expansion symbol is the Thran Tome.
Storyline
Weatherlight began the longest story arc in Magic's history, which would last continuously until the release of Apocalypse four years later (the aftermath of the story was explored for two years afterward). The story introduces the crew of the flying ship Weatherlight, which traverses the planes of the multiverse in search of the scattered group of ancient artifacts known collectively as the Legacy. The captain of the ship, Sisay, is abducted to the shadowy world of Rath, and her old friend and crewmate, a former Benalish soldier named Gerrard, is pressed into taking command of the ship to rescue her.
Set history
Even though Weatherlight was the last expansion in the Mirage block it does not continue the story set in Mirage and Visions. Instead, this expansion begins a new story with new characters. It should be noted that Sisay and the flying ship Weatherlight had been mentioned in and played a relatively minor role in Mirage and Visions. Mechanics from the other expansions in this block do appear as well as some new ones.
Mechanics
- Weatherlight was based largely around the use of the graveyard. The set boasted more ways to retrieve cards from the graveyard than ever before, and other spells used the graveyard as a resource by removing cards in it from the game.
- Weatherlight was the last set, until Coldsnap, to use cumulative upkeep which had been introduced in Ice Age, but the set provided a new twist: cards with effects which became larger as their cumulative upkeep costs increased.
- Weatherlight was also the last set to use banding, a mechanic created in Alpha, removed because it was deemed too confusing.
- Weatherlight had many so-called "cantrips", another idea that was created for Ice Age - spells that let you draw a card in addition to their normal effect. Weatherlight's innovation was to draw the card as soon as the spell resolved, rather than next turn, a change which is still used on cantrips to this day.
- Though the third set in the Mirage block, Weatherlight does not prominently feature the keyword mechanics introduced in Mirage, phasing and flanking, which appear on only three and two cards, respectively, in this set.