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According to ''Magic'' lead designer [[Mark Rosewater]], "The number-one role of this set's design was capturing the feel of the horror genre."<ref name=relentless/> Monsters were one of the first [[Fantasy tropes and conventions|trope]]s explored which led to the tribal component of the set.
According to ''Magic'' lead designer [[Mark Rosewater]], "The number-one role of this set's design was capturing the feel of the horror genre."<ref name=relentless/> Monsters were one of the first [[Fantasy tropes and conventions|trope]]s explored which led to the tribal component of the set.


The Mongol conquest of Western Xia was a series of conflicts between the Mongol Empire and the Western Xia (Chinese: 西夏; pinyin: Xī Xià) dynasty, also known as the Tangut Empire, or Minya. Hoping to gain both plunder and a powerful vassal state, Mongol leader Genghis Khan commanded some initial raids against Western Xia before launching a full-scale invasion in 1209. This invasion marked both the first major invasion conducted by Genghis and the beginning of the Mongol invasion of China. Despite a major set-back during a nearly year-long siege of the capital, Yinchuan, when the diverted river accidentally flooded their camp, the Mongols convinced Emperor Li Anquan to surrender in January 1210. For nearly a decade the Western Xia served the Mongols as vassals and aided them in the Mongol–Jin War, but when Genghis invaded the Islamic Khwarazmian dynasty in 1219, West
Innistrad is the first set to feature double-faced cards, meaning some of the cards do not feature the ''Magic'' card back design that has been used on every previous Magic card<ref name=relentless/> Every double-faced card features the new transform mechanic.<ref name=vamers>{{cite web | url=http://www.vamers.com/2011/10/08/innistrad/ | title=Review: Magic: The Gathering Innistrad | author=Freddy Labutte | date=October 8, 2011 | publisher=Haupt Media Group | accessdate=February 24, 2014}}</ref> To replace the double-faced cards in decks, "checklist" cards were in boosters, which had the normal back.<ref name=vamers/> This is the first set since ''[[Ravnica: City of Guilds]]'' to have ''Magic'' creator [[Richard Garfield]] on the design team.<ref name="C'mon Innistrad, Part 1">{{cite web|url=http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/mm/159|title=C'mon Innistrad, Part 1|author=Mark Rosewater|date=September 5, 2011|publisher=Wizards of the Coast|accessdate=October 16, 2011}}</ref>

===Dark Ascension===
===Dark Ascension===
''Dark Ascension'' was first revealed at the 2011 [[San Diego Comic-Con International|Comic-Con]] in [[San Diego]], [[California]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gatheringmagic.com/rattle-is-dark-ascension/|title='Rattle' is Dark Ascension|date=July 23, 2011|publisher=Gathering Magic|accessdate=July 23, 2011}}</ref> Just like ''Worldwake'', Dark Ascension is a small set in between two large sets.<ref>{{cite web|title=Dark Ascension Mechanics|url=http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx%3Fx%3Dmtg/daily/mm/177+&cd=6&hl=en&ct=clnk}}</ref> Dark Ascension boosters always contain a double-faced card of any rarity to replace one of the commons in the pack. Much of the development had a top down approach.
''Dark Ascension'' was first revealed at the 2011 [[San Diego Comic-Con International|Comic-Con]] in [[San Diego]], [[California]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gatheringmagic.com/rattle-is-dark-ascension/|title='Rattle' is Dark Ascension|date=July 23, 2011|publisher=Gathering Magic|accessdate=July 23, 2011}}</ref> Just like ''Worldwake'', Dark Ascension is a small set in between two large sets.<ref>{{cite web|title=Dark Ascension Mechanics|url=http://www.wizards.com/magic/magazine/article.aspx%3Fx%3Dmtg/daily/mm/177+&cd=6&hl=en&ct=clnk}}</ref> Dark Ascension boosters always contain a double-faced card of any rarity to replace one of the commons in the pack. Much of the development had a top down approach.

Revision as of 17:28, 29 March 2016

Innistrad
common expansion symbol
Two backwards-facing herons
ReleasedSeptember 30, 2011
Size264 cards (16 Mythic Rare, 59 Rare, 67 Uncommon, 107 Common, 15 Basic Land)
MechanicsCurse, Fight, Flashback, Morbid, Transform
DesignersMark Rosewater (lead), Richard Garfield, Jenna Helland, Graeme Hopkins, Tom LaPille
DevelopersErik Lauer (lead), Mark L. Gottlieb, David Humpherys, Tom LaPille, Adam Lee, Kenneth Nagle
Development codeShake
Expansion codeISD
First set in the Innistrad block
Innistrad Dark Ascension Avacyn Restored
Magic 2012 Dark Ascension
Scars of Mirrodin Block Return to Ravnica Block
Dark Ascension
common expansion symbol
The Innistrad symbol turned inside out[1]
ReleasedFebruary 3, 2012
Size158 cards (12 Mythic Rare, 38 Rare, 44 Uncommon, 64 Common, 0 Basic Land)[2]
MechanicsUndying, Fateful Hour, Morbid, Flashback, Transform
DesignersMark Rosewater (lead), Jenna Helland, Zac Hill, Graeme Hopkins, Matt Tabak
DevelopersTom LaPille (lead), Mark L. Gottlieb, Zac Hill, David Humpherys, Ken Troop
Development codeRattle
Expansion codeDKA
Second set in the Innistrad block
Innistrad Dark Ascension Avacyn Restored
Innistrad Avacyn Restored
Scars of Mirrodin Block Return to Ravnica Block
Avacyn Restored
Avacyn Restored Icon
Avacyn's Collar
ReleasedMay 4, 2012
Size244 cards (15 Mythic Rare, 53 Rare, 60 Uncommon, 101 Common, 15 Basic Land)
MechanicsUndying, Soulbond, Miracle
DesignersBrian Tinsman (lead), Mark L. Gottlieb, Dave Guskin, Kenneth Nagle, Bill Rose, Mark Rosewater
DevelopersDavid Humpherys (lead), Mark Globus, Dave Guskin, Erik Lauer, Billy Moreno, Matt Sernett
Development codeRoll
Expansion codeAVR
Third set in the Innistrad block
Innistrad Dark Ascension Avacyn Restored
Dark Ascension Magic 2013
Scars of Mirrodin Block Return to Ravnica Block

The Innistrad block is a block of the collectible card game Magic: The Gathering, consisting of the expansion sets Innistrad (September 30, 2011), Dark Ascension (February 3, 2012) and Avacyn Restored (May 4, 2012).[3][4][5] Innistrad is a "top-down" designed block based on Gothic horror.[6] The set's mechanics and effects take mainly graveyard themes, with a minor focus on tribal themes. The tagline for the set is "Horror Lurks Within". It has 264 cards.[3][7][8]

Design and development

Innistrad

According to Magic lead designer Mark Rosewater, "The number-one role of this set's design was capturing the feel of the horror genre."[6] Monsters were one of the first tropes explored which led to the tribal component of the set.

The Mongol conquest of Western Xia was a series of conflicts between the Mongol Empire and the Western Xia (Chinese: 西夏; pinyin: Xī Xià) dynasty, also known as the Tangut Empire, or Minya. Hoping to gain both plunder and a powerful vassal state, Mongol leader Genghis Khan commanded some initial raids against Western Xia before launching a full-scale invasion in 1209. This invasion marked both the first major invasion conducted by Genghis and the beginning of the Mongol invasion of China. Despite a major set-back during a nearly year-long siege of the capital, Yinchuan, when the diverted river accidentally flooded their camp, the Mongols convinced Emperor Li Anquan to surrender in January 1210. For nearly a decade the Western Xia served the Mongols as vassals and aided them in the Mongol–Jin War, but when Genghis invaded the Islamic Khwarazmian dynasty in 1219, West

Dark Ascension

Dark Ascension was first revealed at the 2011 Comic-Con in San Diego, California.[9] Just like Worldwake, Dark Ascension is a small set in between two large sets.[10] Dark Ascension boosters always contain a double-faced card of any rarity to replace one of the commons in the pack. Much of the development had a top down approach.

Dark Ascension develops the themes of Innistrad. The plane is still plagued by Werewolves, Zombies, Vampires, Spirits and other creatures of the night. The set puts a stronger emphasis on those creature types, giving each type of monster more support. Meanwhile, the humans are on the verge of extinction and have to take desperate measures to stem the tide. Dark Ascension has several broken cycles (a cycle where one color is omitted) to show how humans are flagging.

Storyline

The events of the Innistrad block center on the events after the sundering of the Helvault, a giant chunk of silver metal that was used by the archangel Avacyn to imprison Innistrad's worst horrors, the demons. It is then revealed why the archangel Avacyn vanished from the plane in the first place, leaving the humans of the plane defenseless against the gothic horrors of Innistrad.

In the early days of Avacyn's presence in Innistrad, long before the block takes place, the archangel sought to rid the plane of its demonic influences. Accompanied by her fellow angels, she challenged each demon she encountered to single combat, defeating and dispatching them one-by-one. However, since demons are beings composed of pure mana, their defeat only meant that their physical forms were shattered, their dark essence living on. Eventually the black mana would coalesce in another dark corner of the plane, and another demon would appear.

Avacyn soon noted that no matter how many times a demon was defeated, there would always be another one to take its place. All that its destruction would buy was temporary peace to the afflicted towns and villages. Thus, she took an oath, saying "What cannot be destroyed, must be bound". This oath is reflected in the symbol of the archangel herself, the Collar of Avacyn, shaped to bind any evil that would not be destroyed. With this new goal in mind, Avacyn used her divine magics to trap demons, one-by-one in the Helvault. She was so successful at doing this that after a time, only the plane's elder demons remained free of the Helvault's magical prison.[11]

It was then that the great demon Griselbrand decided to challenge Avacyn to single combat, boldly landing on the top of the Helvault itself. For many days the battle raged on between archangel and archdemon, watched only by the church's highest officials (such as Mikaeus, the lunarch) and Avacyn's most powerful angelic compatriots (Gisela, leader of the angelic Flight of Goldnight, was the only one explicitly mentioned to have been a spectator).[12]

Seeing as she could not defeat Griselbrand, Avacyn used all her remaining power to cast a final binding spell to drive the archdemon into the Helvault and seal him away forever. However, at that moment, the demon revealed his endgame, to trap the archangel herself in her own prison. Using his spear, Griselbrand thrust the weapon through her, dealing her a mortal blow just as the binding spell was completed. The spell backfired, drawing in both angel and demon to the Helvault, with the ongoing spectators watching in horror as their beloved archangel was impaled, then imprisoned within the magical chunk of moonsilver.[13]

Because of fears that reporting Avacyn's disappearance would incite mass hysteria and panic amongst the human denizens of the plane, Mikaeus and the other church officials decided to cover up any reports concerning the reason behind archangel's disappearance. Nevertheless, the archmages and clergy of the Church soon began to feel the aftereffects of the archangel's vanishing. Spells, wards and enchantments began to fail all over Innistrad. Prayers to the archangel went unanswered. Monsters and creatures of the night were no longer held at bay by Avacyn's holy might. Sensing weakness, Innistrad's werewolf howlpacks, vampire hordes and unstoppable waves of zombies began preying actively on the humans.

At the onset of these events in Innistrad the Planeswalker Liliana Vess had come to the plane of Innistrad to reclaim her soul, which she had traded to four demons in exchange for beauty and power. She believes that by killing her dark debtors, her own bargain would be negated, and she wouldn't have to continue being subservient to these demons. During her earlier days of serving her demonic masters she eventually found and claimed a dark artifact known as the Chain Veil, which greatly amplified the potential of her dark magics. Liliana used the power of the Veil to kill one of her four demonic masters, Kothophed, and she has tracked her next target, Griselbrand, to Innistrad.

During her search for the demon, Liliana was beset by the Planeswalker Garruk Wildspeaker, on whom she had used the Chain Veil to bestow a curse in a previous encounter. However, she managed to fend him off due to the dampening properties of the Veil's curse upon Garruk's nature magic. In the end, Garruk was overwhelmed by a small army of undead raised by Liliana and left for dead.

Upon reaching the great city of Thraben, Liliana uncovers a plot by two rival sibling necromancers to besiege the holy city, the blue-oriented skabaren Geralf, and his black-oriented ghoulcaller sister Gisa. Despite the city receiving warning reports from cathars and inquisitors, not much was done to reinforce the city's walls and failing wards. Due to this lack of adequate preparation, the holy city was caught unawares by the massive army both siblings had amassed. In the end, only the quick thinking of the cathar Thalia spared the city from utter destruction. Thalia's plan was simple, to use the thatched straw roofs of Thraben's houses to create a ring of fire, burning down the entire army of undead. The plan was successful as most of the city was spared from the undead horde, albeit at the loss of many cathars and buildings because of the great fire.

Despite this successful defence, during the siege, Geralf infiltrated the heart of the city and slew Mikaeus, the lunarch himself. Not wanting the news to demoralise the already downcast human citizens of the plane, the other church officials buried the lunarch in secret. Liliana used this opportunity to raise Mikaeus from the dead and interrogate the corpse of Griselbrand's whereabouts, instead learning of the epic battle between Avacyn and her demonic master and their current entrapment in the Helvault.

Not possessing magic capable of sundering the great silver mass, Liliana approached the problem from a different angle. She reanimated a small army of ghouls and zombies and proceeded to attack the sanctuary where the Helvault resided. Now charged with protecting the Helvault at all costs, the newly appointed Guardian of Thraben, Thalia faced off Liliana with a squad of elite cathars backing her up. Catching them completely off guard, Liliana paralyzed the squad of cathars with a wave of dark magic and gave Thalia this ultimatum: sunder the Helvault, or watch her fellow comrades fall to the undead army. It only took the strangled cry of a single cathar as he fell prey to the ghouls that Thalia pointed toward the Helvault and cursed Liliana.

With a great explosion, the silver prison that was the Helvault shattered, releasing demons and archangel alike.[6] No one noticed the ribbons of black mana streaking away from the shattered remains. All eyes were fixed upon the golden helix streaking out into the sky. Avacyn had returned to the plane. When the Helvault shattered, Avacyn emerged at her full strength. Her presence reinfused the Avacynian protective wards with holy magic once again. Her angelic host was restored to its full powers, which gave the humans the chance to gain the upper hand in their fight against evil. The three flights of angels reformed in greater numbers than before. Once again, they became Avacyn's soldiers on the front lines of battle. Only this time, instead of barely containing the monsters of the world, the angels and their human allies began pushing them back, away from the bastions of human civilization. For the first time, they were winning.[12]

Now that Griselbrand was also freed from the Helvault, Liliana continues her search for the demon, and her release from the fell contract she entered into.

Meanwhile, the plane's horrors continued to be driven back by the renewed power of the Church. In the process of purging the town of Gatstaf from the threat of werewolf howlpacks, the villagers appealed to Avacyn to remove the curse of lycanthropy upon their loved ones, whom they could not bear to see put to death because of a curse they could not control. Although she could not undo the werewolf curse, she revealed that she would instead transform those afflicted by the curse (but loyal to her and the Church), fusing the warring aspects of human and wolf into a single creature; the "wolfir". In a powerful wave of spells that would become known as the Cursemute, Avacyn's magic reverberated throughout the plane, transforming not just many werewolves but undoing many of the world's foul curses. The wolfir emerged as a new race of great wolf-creatures dedicated to the principles of the Church of Avacyn.

The Cursemute had an unintended impact on a visitor to the plane: Garruk Wildspeaker. At the moment the Cursemute swept across the land, Garruk was knee-deep in swamp muck surrounded by the severed limbs of Liliana's ghouls. He had barely managed to defeat them, and burdened by the Veil's curse, was slowly descending into madness. Close to death and tormented by pain and fury, Garruk's mind slipped away from him. He wandered in blind circles, shouting at the ravens and imagined monsters. It might have been the end of the great hunter, but for the events unfolding in Gatstaf Spring.

When Avacyn's thaumaturgy reached him, Garruk regained his senses. He stared down at his arms, watching the black veins receding from his skin. He was overcome with joy at the sudden absence of pain and sickness. But the relief was short-lived. Within seconds the veins reappeared, his blood seemed to thicken to tar, and his back bent under the weight of the Veil's curse once again. The Cursemute was enough to bring him back from madness and death, but it was not enough to cure him.

After slogging his way out of the swamp, he came upon Angel's Way, a well-traveled road between Kessig and Thraben. He knew Liliana was heading to Thraben, and he could doggedly continue his pursuit. Or he could strike out another way, toward the origin of the magic he had felt so strongly. There was a power on this plane that could cure curses. Maybe there was another way to rid him of his evil burden—a way that didn't involve the death-witch. [14][15]

Tribes

In Innistrad there are five tribes, major creature types that also play a role mechanically. Each tribe is linked to an allied color combination.[16]

  • Humans - Humans occur in all colors but occur predominantly in white and green. White humans are frequently depicted as religious officials and warriors under the Church of Avacyn, while green humans are typically monster hunters. This is the first set in which humans are treated as a tribe.
  • Spirits - Spirits mainly fall under white and blue mana, but also appear sporadically in the other colors. White spirits typically represent benevolent guardian spirits while blue spirits represent mischievous geists.
  • Zombies - Zombies occur in black and blue. Blue zombies (or skaabs) are Frankenstein's Monster-like beings stitched together from disparate body parts and reanimated by necro-alchemists, while black zombies are ones that have risen from their graves through necromancy and attack in hordes.
  • Vampires - Vampires occur in black and red. Black vampires showcase the sophisticated individuals that form the vampiric aristocratic families while red vampires usually depict vampires who have gone wild with bloodthirst, becoming utter bloodfeeding savages.
  • Werewolves - Werewolves occur in red and green. Every werewolf is a double-faced card with the transform mechanic. One side of each of the werewolf cards represents the afflicted human, while the other side represents the actual werewolf that the cursed human transforms into when certain conditions are met. Green werewolves are usually hermits and outcasts, while red werewolves are mostly bandits and renegades.

Mechanics

Innistrad introduces four new mechanics (Curse, Fight, Morbid, Transform) and reintroduces one old mechanic (Flashback). Curses are a new enchantment subtype that enchants a player, causing negative effects (hence the name) of varying degrees.[6][17] Fight is a new keyword that refers to two creatures dealing damage to each other equal to their power simultaneously (it had appeared on previous cards, but this is the first time it was keyworded).[6] Morbid conditions occur if a creature has died earlier in the turn that the spell is cast or the ability is used.[6] The transform mechanic allows certain creatures to turn into different creatures once certain conditions specified on the card are met. Each card that can transform is a double-faced card.[6] The returning mechanic (from the Odyssey and Time Spiral blocks) was flashback. Spells with flashback can be played again from the graveyard, essentially getting a second use out of the spell. However, using a Flashback ability removes the card from the game.[6]

All the major mechanics of Innistrad, including Double-faced cards, return for Dark Ascension.[6] Many of the double-faced cards in Dark Ascension are humans on one side and werewolves on the other. Dark Ascension also has a number of cards involving the number 13. Two new mechanics debuted in Dark Ascension: Fateful Hour and Undying.[18] Cards with fateful hour abilities have an enhanced effect when their controller has 5 or fewer life points remaining. Undying is a new keyword mechanic that is featured on creature cards. When a creature with Undying dies, if it had no +1/+1 counters on it, it returns to the battlefield with a +1/+1 counter on it, effectively allowing a creature to survive destruction at least once.

Two new mechanics debuted in Avacyn Restored: miracle and soulbond[19] Miracle is a new keyword found on instants and sorceries. Spells with Miracle have a cheaper, alternate casting cost that can be paid if the spell was the first card drawn during the turn, then immediately cast after being drawn. Soulbond is a new keyword mechanic that is featured on creature cards. When a creature with Soulbond enters the battlefield, it can be paired up with another creature that player controls, granting bonus abilities to both creatures until one or both creatures leave play. Conversely, if another creature enters play, it can be paired with an unpaired creature with Soulbond.[6] Of the mechanics of Innistrad and Dark Ascension, only undying returns for Avacyn.

Reception

In 2012 Innistrad won the Origins award as best Collectible Card Expansion Game of the Year.[20]

Shadows Over Innistrad

The story of Innistrad continues on in the Shadows Over Innistrad, the block after Battle for Zendikar.[21] Archangel Avacyn has begun to go mad and is killing humans and supernatural creatures alike. Jace Beleren is on Innistrad investigating about Sorin and his whereabouts since he was not present at the Gatewatch. Sorin Markov has returned to his home plane to find the world turning in on itself with his creation, Avacyn, no longer following her prerogative. Nahiri has arrived on Innistrad[22] and is wreaking havoc to Markov Manor.[23] Many of the vampires of the House Markov are now dead.[23]

The set brings back beloved mechanics in the form of double-faced cards and madness, while also bringing new mechanics like delirium and skulk to the trading card game.[24]

Notes and references

  1. ^ Dommermuth, Brady. "Ask Brady". Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  2. ^ "DKA Card List, Sorted by Rarity". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved January 28, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Monty Ashley (14 March 2011). "Announcing Innistrad". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved 14 March 2011.
  4. ^ "'Announcing Dark Ascension". Wizards of the Coast. July 25, 2011. Retrieved July 25, 2011.
  5. ^ Monty Ashley (15 December 2011). "Announcing Avacyn Restored". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved 15 December 2011.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Innistrad Block". Relentless MTG. Retrieved February 24, 2014.
  7. ^ ertaislament (2013-02-02), Innistrad Block, retrieved 2013-10-04
  8. ^ Morgan, Matt (2011-09-13), Exclusive Sneak Peek: New Magic The Gathering Innistrad Card Revealed, retrieved 2013-10-06
  9. ^ "'Rattle' is Dark Ascension". Gathering Magic. July 23, 2011. Retrieved July 23, 2011.
  10. ^ "Dark Ascension Mechanics".
  11. ^ "A Planeswalker's Guide to Innistrad: Introduction". Wizards of the Coast. August 24, 2011. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  12. ^ a b "A Planeswalker's Guide to Avacyn Restored: Part 1". Wizards of the Coast. April 11, 2012. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  13. ^ Beyer, Doug (March 21, 2012). "The Guardian, The Witch, and The Angel". Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  14. ^ "A Planeswalker's Guide to Avacyn Restored: Part 2". Wizards of the Coast. April 18, 2012. Retrieved January 6, 2013.
  15. ^ Henke, Tobias (17 April 2012). "Die Hintergrundgeschichte von Avacyns Rückkehr" (in German). PlanetMtG. Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  16. ^ Cite error: The named reference C'mon Innistrad, Part 1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  17. ^ Cite error: The named reference vamers was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  18. ^ "Dark Ascension Mechanics". Wizards of the Coast. 9 January 2012. Retrieved 9 January 2012.
  19. ^ "Avacyn Restored Mechanics". Retrieved 13 April 2012.
  20. ^ "The 38th Annual Origins Awards Winners". The Game Manufacturers Association. Retrieved February 10, 2016.
  21. ^ "Announcing Shadows over Innistrad". Magic the Gathering. Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  22. ^ Yu, Jarvis. "Nahiri, the Harbinger". Gathering Magic. Coolstuff Inc. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  23. ^ a b "Declaration in Stone". Mythic Spoiler. Mythic Spoiler. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  24. ^ Tabak, Matt. "Mechanics of Shadows over Innistrad". Magic the Gathering. Wizards of the Coast. Retrieved 10 March 2016.