The plane of Taramir has reached the end of its time. The struggles of the Waning Age have been forgotten, for the sun has set for the final time, leaving the world in darkness. Humanity survives in the vastness of the Grand Fortress, a stronghold that holds the last millions of the human race, and in the townships scattered throughout the darkness, perched upon a razor's edge. While humans are associated with all colors of mana, they are most strongly tied to white mana, and the works of their civilization unfold only as far as the light they can produce.
☼Taramir Block☼ Taramir Block consists of three sets: Taramir, Waning Light, and finally Age of Darkness. All three sets feature the new mechanics Salvage and Decay as well as the returning mechanic Cumulative Upkeep. In addition, Waning Light brought Fateseal into the picture. To this, Age of Darkness adds the return of Vanishing.
Salvage: Salvage is an activated ability that can be activated only when the card with salvage is in its owner's graveyard, when he or she could cast a sorcery. Salvaging a card exiles it and has the listed effects. Taramir introduced Salvage while Waning Light added off-color salvage costs and Salvage spells with effects dissimilar to their initial effect from being cast. Age of Darkness introduces Colorless and Nonmana salvage costs.
Decay: Decay is an ability word that causes one or more depletion counters to be added to the permanent with Decay, and causes it to be sacrificed when too many depletion counters have been accumulated.
~Rares~ There are two horizontal cycles of rares here: the Vanishing Iconics, which have an effect if they die before their due time, and the Taramir Incarnations.
Other than that, we have two cards that support Wall Tribal at rare: Walls of the Grand Fortress (Motto: "The Only Wall You'll Ever Need") and Defense of the Fortress, an update (nearly a functional reprint) of Fortified Area. The last two cards, Xenophobic Purge and Mass Suicides, are effects I found rather interesting.
Xenophobic Purge is part of a mini-theme in Age of Darkness: hating on multicolor! Purge is the most pushed of the lot (thusfar), annihilating almost anything, unless of course your opponent is playing a monocolored, making it a sideboard card, if a very potent one. Mass suicides on the other hand is the standard 5-mana wrath of the set. It's very color intensive, but at the same time it gets around hexproof, indestructible, and regeneration.
Walls of the Grand Fortress
Creature – Wall [R] Defender, Indestructible Walls of the Grand Fortress may block any number of creatures. 0/10
Starborn Angel
Creature – Angel [R] Flying, Vanishing 4 When Starborn Angel dies, if it had a time counter on it, exile it and gain 4 life 4/4
Stagnation
Creature – Incarnation [R] All permanents have indestructible. Life totals can’t change. If a permanent would enter the battlefield, exile it instead. 4/4
Defense of the Fortress
Enchantment [R] Wall creatures you control get +1/+0 Rather than the attacking player, you assign the combat damage of each creature blocked by one or more walls you control. You can divide that creature's combat damage as you choose among any of the creatures blocking it.
Xenophobic Purge
Instant [R] Exile target permanent if it is multicolored or if it is any color other than the color that is the most common among permanents its controller controls. “Strength comes from unity. Unity comes from ensuring our number is pure. Cast unclean things into the night. If any citizens resist, cast them into the night as well.” – Matricia, Township Mayor
Mass Suicides
Sorcery [R] Each player sacrifices all creatures he or she controls. “In the immediate wake of the last dawn, the population of the Grand Fortress was cut in half and the number of full lorekeepers fell from thirteen to three, a calamitous drop in which suicides played a large part” – Morgan of Voor
~White Mythic~ Lore-wise, walls are not the first defense of the Grand Fortress: it's guarded by a massive network of spellcraft not unlike a Circle of Protection but far more potent and on a far grander scale. The Wards of the Fortress, therefore, offer you (personally) the best protection imaginable from hostile action. Of course, it takes a lot of power, and this is Taramir. So be prepared to pay for that defense... and for the day when you can no longer
Spoiler
Wards of the Fortress
Legendary Enchantment [MR] Cumulative Upkeep - You have Protection from Everything. When Wards of the Fortress leaves the battlefield, sacrifice half the permanents you control, rounded up. "We dare not hope they will last forever, but perhaps they shall last 'long enough'." - Fortress Magistrate
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"Enjoy your screams, Sarpadia - they will soon be muffled beneath snow and ice."
I'm a (self) published author now! You can find my books on Amazon in Paperback or ebook! The Accursed, a standalone young adult fantasy adventure. Witch Hunters, book one of a young adult Scifi-fantasy trilogy.
Stagnation I would have to see played, but it scares me. Any form of alt win con would love this card.
Walls of the Grand Fortress is brutally strong. At 10 toughness, unless someone is making you sac things you are pretty damn safe behind this wall. At least flying creatures can get around it. This card seems Mythic to me.
I really like Starborn Angel. I love the idea of getting a bonus off it if someone kills it early. Why the exile?
Defense of the Fortress I don't have anything to say on. I think the focus on defense and walls is fun.
Purge and Mass Suicides are both well done and I believe balanced. Purge is a A list card for sure and a big draw for the set.
The Mythic...its just not worth playing. A steep cumulative cost with no innate form of protection. I spend 5, get maybe one or two turns where I can still afford to do something before the cumulative cost is eating all my mana, so I can lose half my permanents. That's assuming someone doesn't just pick it off with removal. Only in a very specific deck would I play this and in Limited it would likely be a death sentence. You drop it, and unless we are in some kind of race condition, I just sit back and wait for you to die.
Perfect originality is overrated and often ugly. The best and most beautiful cards I've ever seen were clearly inspired by something else. Cards are not entirely unlike living organisms in this regard. All the good ones are a result of long evolution; the 'original' ones are either mono-cellular or mutant aberrations.
Cato
A true warrior seeks out the greatest foe. Their heart cries out for glorious battle, heedless even to its own end.
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