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Name Vandalblast Edit card
Type Sorcery
Description Destroy target artifact you don't control. Overload Icons of mtgIcons of mtg (You may cast this spell for its overload cost. If you do, change "target" in its text to "each.")
Flavor Beauty is in the eye of the exploder.
Artist Seb McKinnon
Set Outlaws of Thunder Junction Commander #183
Wallpaper Vandalblast Crop image Wallpaper download
Image Vandalblast Full hd image download
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About Vandalblast

Vandalblast, Sorcery, designed by Seb McKinnon first released in Oct, 2012 in the set Return to Ravnica and was printed exactly in 13 different ways. It see play in 1 formats: Commander. It's currently being selled by the minimum price of 413.06. It's a key card in 1 combos.

A deck that focuses on disrupting opponents' artifact-based strategies or relies heavily on its own artifacts would benefit from including Vandalblast. While Vandalblast is a strong card in its own right, some decks may prefer other options like Shattering Spree or By Force for their flexibility or efficiency in dealing with multiple artifacts at once. However, Vandalblast can still be a valuable inclusion in decks looking for a targeted artifact removal spell with the potential for a game-changing blowout when overloaded, making it a worthy consideration for play in the right metagame.

Top 8 decks with Vandalblast

Format

Meta Decks

% total

Average per deck

Commander

25

3.7

1.0

Rules

03/19/21

If you don’t pay the overload cost of Vandalblast, that spell will have a single target. If you pay the overload cost, the spell won’t have any targets.

03/19/21

To determine the total cost of a spell, start with the mana cost or alternative cost you’re paying (such as an overload cost), add any cost increases, then apply any cost reductions. The converted mana cost of the spell is determined by only its mana cost, no matter what the total cost to cast that spell was.

04/15/13

Casting a spell with overload doesn’t change that spell’s mana cost. You just pay the overload cost instead.

04/15/13

If you are instructed to cast a spell with overload “without paying its mana cost,” you can’t choose to pay its overload cost instead.

04/15/13

If you don’t pay the overload cost of a spell, that spell will have a single target. If you pay the overload cost, the spell won’t have any targets.

04/15/13

Note that if the spell with overload is dealing damage, protection from that spell’s color will still prevent that damage.

Where to buy

Seller image Cool Stuff Inc Selling icon

1 uni.

223.26 Visit store
Seller image TCG Player Selling icon

104 uni.

413.06 Visit store
Seller image Card Kingdom Selling icon

51 uni.

671.98 Visit store
Seller image Ebay.com

Visit store
Seller image Printing proxies

$ 0.75 Visit store

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