| Name | Icefeather Aven |
|---|---|
| Type | Creature — bird shaman |
| Description | Flying
Morph |
| Artist | Slawomir Maniak |
| Set | Commander 2019 #194 |
| Wallpaper | |
| Image |
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| Name | Icefeather Aven |
|---|---|
| Type | Creature — bird shaman |
| Description | Flying
Morph |
| Artist | Slawomir Maniak |
| Set | Commander 2019 #194 |
| Wallpaper | |
| Image |
Tierlist
No Rank
Grade it yourself
Icefeather Aven, Creature — bird shaman, designed by Slawomir Maniak first released in Sep, 2014 in the set Khans of Tarkir and was printed exactly in 2 different ways. It see play in 1 formats: Commander.
Icefeather Aven would be a valuable addition to a Simic tempo or control deck in Magic: the Gathering, providing both flying evasion and a versatile bounce effect upon being turned face up. While there may be more powerful options available, such as Mystic Snake for a counter effect or Man-o'-War for repeatable bouncing, Icefeather Aven's flexibility and synergy with morph strategies make it a solid choice for decks looking to disrupt opponents' board states while maintaining a strong flying presence.
09/20/14
A permanent that turns face up or face down changes characteristics but is otherwise the same permanent. Spells and abilities that were targeting that permanent, as well as Auras and Equipment that were attached to the permanent, aren’t affected.
09/20/14
Any time you have priority, you may turn the face-down creature face up by revealing what its morph cost is and paying that cost. This is a special action. It doesn’t use the stack and can’t be responded to. Only a face-down permanent can be turned face up this way; a face-down spell cannot.
09/20/14
If you control the only other creatures when Icefeather Aven is turned face up, you must target one of them. You choose whether that creature is returned to its owner’s hand as the ability resolves.
09/20/14
The face-down spell has no mana cost and has a converted mana cost of 0. When you cast a face-down spell, put it on the stack face down so no other player knows what it is, and pay . This is an alternative cost.
09/20/14
You must ensure that your face-down spells and permanents can easily be differentiated from each other. You’re not allowed to mix up the cards that represent them on the battlefield in order to confuse other players. The order they entered the battlefield should remain clear. Common methods for doing this include using markers or dice, or simply placing them in order on the battlefield.
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