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Kefka, Court Mage // Kefka, Ruler of Ruin

Legendary Creature — Human Wizard // Legendary Creature — Avatar Wizard mythic Final Fantasy · FIN · #322 · EN

A 2 de junio de 2026, Kefka, Court Mage // Kefka, Ruler of Ruin (FIN #322) cuesta desde 26,46 € (Cardmarket).

Carta Kefka, Court Mage // Kefka, Ruler of Ruin — Final Fantasy · FIN · #322

Final Fantasy · FIN · #322

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Kefka, Ruler of Ruin
Coste
{2}{U}{B}{R}
Tipo
Legendary Creature — Human Wizard // Legendary Creature — Avatar Wizard
F / R
4 / 5
Whenever Kefka enters or attacks, each player discards a card. Then you draw a card for each card type among cards discarded this way. {8}: Each opponent sacrifices a permanent of their choice. Transform Kefka. Activate only as a sorcery.

Precio de esta edición

Cardmarket 26,46 €
Cardmarket Foil 64,03 €
CardTrader 28,35 €

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Histórico de precio (90 días)

Histórico 90 días

CardmarketCM FoilCardTrader
64 €23 €04/1706/02

Otras ediciones (5)

Rulings oficiales (10)

  • The card types in Magic include artifact, battle, creature, enchantment, instant, kindred, land, planeswalker, and sorcery. Legendary, basic, and snow are supertypes, not card types; Hero and Saga are subtypes, not card types.
  • The mana value of a nonmodal double-faced card is the mana value of its front face, no matter which face is up.
  • The back face of a nonmodal double-faced card usually has a color indicator that defines its color.
  • In the Commander variant, a double-faced card's color identity is determined by the mana costs and mana symbols in the rules text of both faces combined. If either face has a color indicator or basic land type, those are also considered. For example, Cecil, Dark Knight's color identity is black and white, since its front face is black and its back face has a white color indicator.
  • A token that is created as a copy of a double-faced permanent or a double-faced card in another zone is a double-faced token. It will have both the front face and back face of whatever object it's copying. If it's copying a double-faced permanent whose back face is up, the token will enter with its back face up. It can transform if instructed to do so.
  • A nonmodal double-faced card enters with its front face up by default, unless a spell or ability instructs you to put it onto the battlefield transformed or allows you to cast it transformed, in which case it enters with its back face up.
  • While resolving Kefka, Court Mage's last ability, the next opponent in turn order chooses a permanent they control, then each other opponent in turn order does the same. Then each of the chosen permanents are sacrificed simultaneously.
  • Each face of a nonmodal double-faced card has its own set of characteristics: name, types, subtypes, abilities, and so on. While a nonmodal double-faced permanent is on the battlefield, consider only the characteristics of the face that's currently up. The other set of characteristics is ignored.
  • If you are instructed to put a card that isn't a double-faced card onto the battlefield transformed, it will not enter at all. In that case, it stays in the zone it was previously in. For example, if a single-faced card is a copy of Crystal Fragments, it will be exiled during the resolution of its second ability and remain in exile.
  • Each nonmodal double-faced card in this release is cast face up. In every zone other than the battlefield, consider only the characteristics of its front face. If it is on the battlefield, consider only the characteristics of the face that's up; the other face's characteristics are ignored.