General [TMT] Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles


I have a bad feeling we'll start to see this stupid guy everywhere. There's some hint of purported synergies (blink, sacrifice, ninjutsu) but that's like saying Ragavan is good for artifact matters and play from exile themes.
It kind of depends on your power level, right? Cards like this don't necessarily need a ton of synergy to make it into a final 40, but they benefit immensely from drafters who build around the things they're trying to do. A good recent example of something similar to this is Up the Beanstalk: beans doesn't require a lot to be worth putting into a deck, but it gets infinitely better once you start combining it with things like Delve Spells, alternate costs, and Cost Reduction Effects so you can start stacking those triggers more often.

Being a creature, guy is obviously more flexible than Beans, but I think he might still have that "unlock the fun" potential that is still missing in a lot of threats.
 
A good recent example of something similar to this is Up the Beanstalk
Good point, the difference between this and Beans though is that Beans asks you to do something with your deck. As broken as it is already, imagine if it just said 'Whenever a spell with mana value 5 or greater is cast, draw a card.'
If your opponent doesn't have enchantment removal, they'd probably still play their 5 mana spells when they need to and draw you a card. My concern is that that's how this will play out too.
Need to get my mana online? Well I'm still going to crack my fetch and grow your shredder. Have a bigger threat or a trade I need to make? I'll still have to take it and have him grow 2x.
but I think he might still have that "unlock the fun" potential that is still missing in a lot of threats.
You're right, and really the only reason I'm upset is that this is a cool design that has that potential for fun if you're the one playing him, but I'm not sure it's going to feel that way on the other end of the table.
 
I mean, only one of the two sets has a card portraying a totalitarian dictator publicly mutilating his teenage son as retaliation for speaking out of turn in a war council meeting, and it ain't TMNT.

EDIT: For clarity, it's not one of those things where the series just implies that that's happening, or wraps it up in a metaphor. The only part that isn't directly shown on screen is the actual part where Ozai burns half of Zuko's face off. This happens in, like, episode 3 or 4.

I think this was in like episode 11 The Storm. But yeah, Avatar loses the Nickelodeon energy it has in the very beginning in episode 3 already, when they travel to the southern air temple where they discover the traces of the literal genocide that happened by the hands of the fire nation. I just watched avatar with my wife this year for the first time and episode 3 was the first where it became clear that this is not really just a kids cartoon.

But arguments for The Storm being a crucial turning point for the series can be made:



Honestly, I think Avatar is actually a fantastic fit for Magic. It’s one of the most fully realized fantasy worlds of the 21st century — elemental 'magic' systems, distinct nations and cultures with deep lore, mythic heroes and villains, clear philosophies and aesthetics — all things Magic already thrives on. If anything, it feels like the Gen Z equivalent of The Lord of the Rings: a defining fantasy saga for its era, packed with deep themes, moral conflict, and adventure.

Given how well Magic handled The Lord of the Rings, both thematically and mechanically, Avatar feels like a natural successor. If Wizards treats it with the same care they gave Middle-earth, it could easily be another one of the Universes Beyond sets that enhances the game rather than distracting from it.

Couldn't agree more.

And I don't mind the hand drawn comic look as much as some do, that is nothing new to magic either. Even original ravnica block had a lot of comic-esque art by artists like Paolo Parente.
 
There's some hint of purported synergies (blink, sacrifice, ninjutsu) but that's like saying Ragavan is good for artifact matters and play from exile themes.
Not to toot my own horn - just have to set up the payoff post - but we established the phrase for this some sets ago:

Cards I omitted from the above lists based on power level assumptions - these sure do synergize, but I assume they're, as someone here memorably once posted, "I put Fable of the Mirror-Breaker in to support the token and goblin decks :)" situations:

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it's Proliferating the Jitte :marofl:
 
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