| Name | Plea for Power |
|---|---|
| Type | Sorcery |
| Description | Each player votes for time or knowledge. |
| Artist | Josh Hass |
| Set | Tales of Middle-earth Commander #195 |
| Wallpaper | |
| Image |
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| Name | Plea for Power |
|---|---|
| Type | Sorcery |
| Description | Each player votes for time or knowledge. |
| Artist | Josh Hass |
| Set | Tales of Middle-earth Commander #195 |
| Wallpaper | |
| Image |
Tierlist
No Rank
Grade it yourself
Plea for Power, Sorcery, designed by John Severin Brassell first released in Jun, 2014 in the set Conspiracy and was printed exactly in 5 different ways.
A control or combo deck focused on drawing cards and taking extra turns would benefit most from using Plea for Power in Magic: the Gathering. However, there are better cards with similar effects, such as Time Warp or Time Stretch, which provide more powerful, guaranteed effects without the randomness of a group vote. Ultimately, Plea for Power may not see much play in competitive decks due to its reliance on player voting and the presence of more efficient alternatives.
05/29/14
Because the votes are cast in turn order, each player will know the votes of players who voted beforehand.
05/29/14
No player votes until the spell or ability resolves. Any responses to that spell or ability must be made without knowing the outcome of the vote.
05/29/14
The phrase “the vote is tied” refers only to when there is more than one choice that received the most votes. For example, if a 5-player vote from among three different choices ends 3 votes to 1 vote to 1 vote, the vote isn’t tied.
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