COMMANDER 2011

Fellwar Stone

Fellwar Stone

Piedra de Fellwar


Artefacto


: Agrega a tu reserva de maná un maná de cualquier color que pudiera producir una tierra que controle un oponente.


"¿Qué tienes que yo no pueda obtener?" —Mairsil, el Usurpador


Illustrated by John Avon

· Commander 2011 (CMD)


Fellwar Stone


#248 · Uncommon · Spanish · Nonfoil


Legal Formats

Standard
Pioneer
Modern
Legacy
Vintage
Commander
Oathbreaker
Alchemy
Explorer
Historic
Timeless
Brawl
Pauper
Penny

Variants

Under Construction

Prints


Rulings


2004-10-04 : It only produces one mana even if the land can produce more than one.

2004-10-04 : The ability can be activated if the opponent has no lands that produce mana, but the effect will not be able to generate any mana.

2004-10-04 : This works even if the opponent's lands are tapped. It only checks what kinds of mana can be produced, not if the abilities that produce them are usable right now.

2009-10-01 : Fellwar Stone checks the effects of all mana-producing abilities of lands your opponents control, but it doesn't check their costs. For example, Vivid Crag has the ability "{T}, Remove a charge counter from Vivid Crag: Add one mana of any color." If an opponent controls Vivid Crag and you control Fellwar Stone, you can tap Fellwar Stone for any color of mana. It doesn't matter whether Vivid Crag has a charge counter on it, and it doesn't matter whether it's untapped.

2009-10-01 : Fellwar Stone doesn't care about any restrictions or riders your opponents' lands (such as Ancient Ziggurat or Hall of the Bandit Lord) put on the mana they produce. It just cares about colors of mana.

2009-10-01 : The colors of mana are white, blue, black, red, and green. Fellwar Stone can't be tapped for colorless mana, even if a land an opponent controls could produce colorless mana.

2009-10-01 : When determining what colors of mana your opponents' lands could produce, take into account any applicable replacement effects that would apply to those lands' mana abilities (such as Contamination's effect, for example). If there is more than one, consider them in any possible order.

Comments

Under Construction