She's missing an arm now, but that is no matter to a god, right?
Joshua Nelson Archives
Let's talk for a second about Pioneer in the context of Magic: The Gathering formats that have come before it
SCGCON is a three-day event where Magic players from all across the world congregate to play competitively.
Wizards of the Coast has announced a smattering of additions to their Banned and Restricted List for Magic: The Gathering.
Not too long ago, we wrote a deck tech revolving around Bontu, the Glorified. This article will focus on the eternalized version of Bontu.
Today, we will be looking over black, a color which may be even harder to find compliments for than blue.
This is my ongoing monthly segment where I check in on how Magic: The Gathering: Arena is from a player perspective. But first, a clarification.
On November 14th, Wizards of the Coast sent out an email to Arena users, stating that data had been compromised..
(Or, "Get In Nerds: The Party Bus Cometh!")
This was an inevitability as early as this past Friday evening and now we at Bleeding Cool are here to make sense of the wreckage.
There will be spoilers for "War of the Spark: Forsaken" ahead, so be warned.
As many of you know, I'd been reviewing a good many of Games Workshop's boxes lately. This one is big.
File this under news which may absolutely floor a ton of Magic: The Gathering players while being completely predictable to a good many others.
The very worst offenders among cards that facilitate a frustrating board state are the ones that provide players extra turns of play.
Today's deck techs will reflect on the two cards centered around Amonkhet's former God of Wisdom, Kefnet the Mindful (and his eternalized counterpoint, God-Eternal Kefnet).