Sobre Isla de Vesuva
Isla de Vesuva, Plano — dominaria, diseñada por Zoltan Boros & Gabor Szikszai lanzado por primera vez en Sep, 2009 en edición Planechase Planes y fue impreso exactamente en 3 diferentes formas.   
  Una baraja centrada en crear un amplio tablero de criaturas diversas se beneficiaría al usar Isla de Vesuva, ya que puede generar fichas adicionales cada vez que una criatura que no sea ficha entra al campo de batalla, potencialmente abrumando a los oponentes con un enjambre de criaturas. Sin embargo, hay opciones más poderosas disponibles, como Vidas Paralelas o Temporada de Duplicar, que proporcionan efectos similares de duplicación de fichas de manera más eficiente. Aunque Isla de Vesuva puede que no sea la elección más competitiva, aún podría verse en juego en barajas casuales o temáticas que buscan crear estados de tablero caóticos e impredecibles.
  Reglas
   01/07/13 
 If the permanent targeted by the chaos ability isn’t destroyed (because it regenerates, or because it has indestructible), all other permanents with the same name as it will still be destroyed. 
 01/10/09 
 A plane card is treated as if its text box included “When you roll , put this card on the bottom of its owner’s planar deck face down, then move the top card of your planar deck off that planar deck and turn it face up.” This is called the “planeswalking ability.” 
 01/10/09 
 A token’s name is the same as the creature types listed by the effect that created it, unless the token copies a permanent or that effect specifically gives that token a name. For example, the effect of The Fourth Sphere’s chaos ability creates a token with the name “Zombie.” 
 01/10/09 
 As a token is created by Isle of Vesuva’s first ability, it checks the printed values of the creature it’s copying, as well as any copy effects that have been applied to it. It won’t copy counters on the creature, nor will it copy other effects that have changed the creature’s power, toughness, types, color, and so on. 
 01/10/09 
 The chaos ability will destroy all creatures with the same name as the target creature, not just tokens created by Isle of Vesuva’s first ability. It doesn’t matter who controls them. 
 01/10/09 
 The controller of a face-up plane card is the player designated as the “planar controller.” Normally, the planar controller is whoever the active player is. However, if the current planar controller would leave the game, instead the next player in turn order that wouldn’t leave the game becomes the planar controller, then the old planar controller leaves the game. The new planar controller retains that designation until they leave the game or a different player becomes the active player, whichever comes first. 
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