About Battle at the Bridge
Battle at the Bridge, Sorcery, designed by Chris Rallis first released in Jan, 2017 in the set Aether Revolt Promos and was printed exactly in 3 different ways.
A deck that heavily relies on artifacts and has a focus on controlling the board would benefit from using Battle at the Bridge. This card can be particularly useful in an artifact-heavy deck that can easily generate artifacts to help reduce the cost of casting it and gain life while dealing with threats on the board. While there may be other removal spells that are more efficient or versatile, Battle at the Bridge can still be a solid inclusion in decks that can take advantage of its mechanics effectively.
Rules
01/19/18
There are many important moments in the story, but the most crucial—called “story spotlights”—are shown on cards. These cards have the Planeswalker symbol in their text box; this symbol has no effect on gameplay. You can read more about these events in the official Magic fiction at http://www.mtgstory.com.
02/09/17
Equipment attached to a creature doesn’t become tapped when that creature becomes tapped, and tapping that Equipment doesn’t cause the creature to become tapped.
02/09/17
If an artifact you control has a mana ability with in the cost, activating that ability while casting a spell with improvise will result in the artifact being tapped when you pay the spell’s costs. You won’t be able to tap it again for improvise. Similarly, if you sacrifice an artifact to activate a mana ability while casting a spell with improvise, that artifact won’t be on the battlefield when you pay the spell’s costs, so you won’t be able to tap it for improvise.
02/09/17
If the target creature becomes an illegal target, Battle at the Bridge doesn’t resolve and none of its effects happen. You won’t gain life.
02/09/17
Improvise can’t pay for , , , , , or mana symbols in a spell’s total cost.
02/09/17
When calculating a spell’s total cost, include any alternative costs, additional costs, or anything else that increases or reduces the cost to cast the spell. Improvise applies after the total cost is calculated.
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