Name | Electrickery |
---|---|
Type | Instant |
Description | Electrickery deals 1 damage to target creature you don't control.
Overload |
Artist | Greg Staples |
Set | The List #GK1-29 |
Wallpaper | ![]() |
Image | ![]() |
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Name | Electrickery |
---|---|
Type | Instant |
Description | Electrickery deals 1 damage to target creature you don't control.
Overload |
Artist | Greg Staples |
Set | The List #GK1-29 |
Wallpaper | ![]() |
Image | ![]() |
Tierlist
No Rank
Grade it yourself
Electrickery, Instant, designed by Greg Staples first released in May, 2020 in the set Return to Ravnica and was printed exactly in 3 different ways. It see play in 2 formats: Pauper and Commander.
Electrickery is a valuable card for aggressive red decks in Magic: the Gathering that aim to control the board by dealing damage to multiple small creatures. It can be particularly effective against token strategies or decks with many low-toughness creatures. While there are other similar cards like Pyroclasm or Anger of the Gods that offer more flexibility or power, Electrickery can still be a solid choice in the right metagame and should see play in sideboards or as a budget option for players looking to disrupt wide creature strategies.
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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.
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