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MTG >Cards > Rubble

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Rubble image
setminmtgo
- 0.470.0 tix
NameRubble Edit card
TypeSorcery
DescriptionAftermath (Cast this spell only from your graveyard. Then exile it.) Up to three target lands don't untap during their controller's next untap step.
ArtistEric Deschamps
SetAmonkhet Remastered #254
WallpaperRubble Crop image Wallpaperdownload
ImageRubble Full hd imagedownload
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Table of contents

About Rubble

Rubble, Sorcery, designed by Eric Deschamps first released in Apr, 2017 in the set Amonkhet and was printed exactly in 3 different ways. It's currently being selled by the minimum price of 0.47.

Rubble would fit well in a red control or tempo deck that aims to disrupt an opponent's mana base while maintaining pressure, particularly in formats where land untapping is crucial for resource management. It synergizes with strategies that focus on land destruction or taxing opponents' resources, allowing you to capitalize on their inability to cast spells effectively. However, there are arguably stronger options like Blood Moon, which can completely shut down opponents' mana bases by turning non-basic lands into Mountains, or Ruination, which destroys all non-basic lands, offering a more impactful disruption. While Rubble can be useful in niche scenarios, its situational nature may limit its overall playability in competitive environments.

Rules

07/14/17

Once you’ve started to cast a spell with aftermath from your graveyard, the card is immediately moved to the stack. Opponents can’t try to stop the ability by exiling the card with an effect such as that of Crook of Condemnation.

04/18/17

A spell with aftermath cast from a graveyard will always be exiled afterward, whether it resolves, it’s countered, or it leaves the stack in some other way.

04/18/17

Each split card is a single card. For example, if you discard one, you’ve discarded one card, not two. If an effect counts the number of instant and sorcery cards in your graveyard, Destined // Lead counts once, not twice.

04/18/17

If another effect allows you to cast a split card with aftermath from any zone other than a graveyard, you can’t cast the half with aftermath.

04/18/17

Split cards with aftermath have a new frame treatment—the half you can cast from your hand is oriented the same as other cards you’d cast from your hand, while the half you can cast from your graveyard is a traditional split card half. This frame treatment is for your convenience and has no rules significance.

04/18/17

While not on the stack, the characteristics of a split card are the combination of its two halves. For example, Destined // Lead is a green and black card, it is both an instant card and a sorcery card, and its converted mana cost is 6. This means that if an effect allows you to cast a card with converted mana cost 2 from your hand, you can’t cast Destined. This is a change from the previous rules for split cards.

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