RIXRivals of Ixalan

Prophétesse du crépuscule (FR Twilight Prophet)

Prophétesse du crépuscule from Rivals of Ixalan
Prophétesse du crépuscule from Rivals of Ixalan

Créature : vampire et clerc   {2}{B}{B} (CMC:4)

Vol Ascension (Si vous contrôlez au moins dix permanents, vous gagnez l'agrément de la cité pour le reste de la partie.) Au début de votre entretien, si vous avez l'agrément de la cité, révélez la carte du dessus de votre bibliothèque et mettez-la dans votre main. Chaque adversaire perd X points de vie et vous gagnez X points de vie, X étant le coût converti de mana de cette carte.

088 RIX • FRSeb McKinnon

Notes: TODO: Update Copyright

Legal in: Pioneer,Modern,Legacy,Vintage,Commander

Oracle Text (click to copy):

View this MTG card on Gatherer
1/19/2018
If the mana cost of the revealed card includes , X is considered to be 0.
1/19/2018
If the revealed card doesn’t have a mana cost (because it’s a land card, for example), its converted mana cost is 0.
1/19/2018
The converted mana cost of a split card, such as cards with aftermath from the Amonkhet block, is based on the combined mana cost of its two halves.
1/19/2018
In a Two-Headed Giant game, Twilight Prophet’s last ability causes the opposing team to lose twice X life and you gain X life.
1/19/2018
Once you have the city’s blessing, you have it for the rest of the game, even if you lose control of some or all of your permanents. The city’s blessing isn’t a permanent itself and can’t be removed by any effect.
1/19/2018
A permanent is any object on the battlefield, including tokens and lands. Spells and emblems aren’t permanents.
1/19/2018
If you cast a spell with ascend, you don’t get the city’s blessing until it resolves. Players may respond to that spell by trying to change whether you get the city’s blessing.
1/19/2018
If you control ten permanents but don’t control a permanent or resolving spell with ascend, you don’t get the city’s blessing. For example, if you control ten permanents, lose control of one, then cast Golden Demise, you won’t have the city’s blessing and the spell will affect creatures you control.
1/19/2018
If your tenth permanent enters the battlefield and then a permanent leaves the battlefield immediately afterwards (most likely due to the “Legend Rule” or due to being a creature with 0 toughness), you get the city’s blessing before it leaves the battlefield.
1/19/2018
Ascend on a permanent isn’t a triggered ability and doesn’t use the stack. Players can respond to a spell that will give you your tenth permanent, but they can’t respond to getting the city’s blessing once you control that tenth permanent. This means that if your tenth permanent is a land you play, players can’t respond before you get the city’s blessing.
1/19/2018
Some cards have triggered abilities with an intervening “if” clause that checks whether you have the city’s blessing. These are worded “[Trigger condition], if you have the city’s blessing, [effect].” You must already have the city’s blessing in order for these abilities to trigger; otherwise they do nothing. In other words, there’s no way to have the ability trigger if you don’t have the city’s blessing, even if you intend to get it in response to the triggered ability.

Card Twilight Prophet is not on TCGPlayer.