Darksteel FOIL Complete Set ALL FOIL CARDS Factory Sealed MOL MTG Magic
Factory Sealed
FULL FOIL SET
*Investment Grade*
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To build a full foil set such as this would require opening at least 55 booster boxes at a rate of one foil rare/mythic rare per box. Current market price (~$1000.00/box) suggests this would cost at least $55,000 assuming you had perfect collation. These Magic Online sets are superior to hand collation as they are factory fresh.
Darksteel was the first small expansion to have 165 cards (11 extra rares and 11 extra uncommons compared to previous small expansions). The expansion symbol for the set is a miniature version of the Shield of Kaldra. The set continues the heavy artifact theme of its predecessor Mirrodin. Thematically the main components are darksteel artifacts, all of which are indestructible. The set also features an update of the lucky charms.
Mechanics
Modular has artifact creatures enter the battlefield with +1/+1 counters on them equal to the Modular number. If the artifact creature is put into the graveyard from play, these counters are moved to another artifact creature.
Indestructible is also introduced. As the name suggests, indestructible permanents simply can not be destroyed through any means, e.g. direct destruction effects such as Wrath of God or damage. The mechanic would be reused occasionally in later sets, though not exclusively bound to artifacts.
The set also reprises Affinity for artifacts but also introduces Affinity for basic land types in a cycle of Golems.
Notable cards
- Serum Powder is the only non-supplemental card to mention mulligans (the other is the Conspiracy Backup Plan), by giving a player an effective extra mulligan. It sees regular Vintage Dredge play to find Bazaar of Baghdad.
- Neurok Transmuter has the unique ability to remove a type without changing it into something else, resulting in the novelty combo with March of the Machines to create a typeless permanent, which is mentioned in its Gatherer rulings.
- Blinkmoth Nexus is a creature land that follows the design of Mishra's Factory and approaches on same rate of power. It inspired Inkmoth Nexus and gave longevity and evasion to the Arcbound Ravager decks.
- Death Cloud is a Pox reference that formed an Extended archetype in the vein of Wildfire.
Banned and restricted cards
- Aether Vial is a way for creature decks to cheat on mana and avoid countermagic, making it powerful for such decks in early Modern until the Modern Horizons era. It was banned in Mirrodin block tournaments.
- Arcbound Ravager has the combined ability to turn all one's artifacts into power at instant speed, which is often magnified with counter synergies like Hardened Scales. It remains a power player in Vintage, was once dominant in Modern, and was banned in Standard and Mirrodin Block tournaments.
- Mycosynth Lattice makes everything an artifact, both through cost and color. Largely a novelty, it became an unexpected lock piece due to its combination with Karn, the Great Creator, resulting in a ten-mana permanent lock for Urzatron decks. It was banned from Modern in January 2020.
- Skullclamp was notorious for being the poster card for poor late-stage development changes, as the change from +1 toughness to -1 toughness made it a powerful draw engine alongside the "fair" anti-removal usage. It was banned in Standard, Block Constructed, Legacy and Extended formats in 2004, and was on the initial ban list for Modern and has since remained there.
- Trinisphere is the only card that applies a variable cost tax, by way of forcing the mana cost of all spells to be a minimum flat number. A popular lock piece in Vintage despite its restriction in 2005 and sees some Modern play.
Tournament impact
Darksteel is notorious as a very powerful tournament set. At one point it was responsible for two of four cards that were banned in Extended: Aether Vial and Skullclamp. Skullclamp was also very notorious in Standard as well for over-powering creature decks, making them very resilient even to mass destruction and providing a lot of card advantage at a very small cost. It became the first card to be banned in Standard in five years. Later other cards featured in the meta-game warping Affinity deck, especially Arcbound Ravager. Trinisphere was restricted in Vintage due to the format's capacity for one player producing large quantities of mana on the first turn and then dropping Trinisphere, preventing opponents from doing the same.
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What is an MOL set? |
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The Magic Online Redemption Program is a feature on Magic Online that allows a player with a complete digital set on Magic Online to have those cards converted to a complete paper copy of the same set. The digital cards are deleted from the player's account and a the player is sent a corresponding full set of physical cards. A redemption set comes sealed in a shrink-wrapped box with a label on it indicating what set is inside and whether it is regular (non-foil) or premium (foil). As a general rule, Magic Online sets became available for redemption roughly one month after they were released. Each set would be available while supplies lasted or until its Cutoff Date, whichever came first. MOL SETS ARE CONSIDERED THE PROOF SETS OF MTG ! |
What is in the box? |
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Each MOL set includes one (1) copy of each card in that set, with the box indicating if either a regular set (non-foil) or premium (foil). The packaging is designed for the precise amount of cards included, leaving little room for movement which might scratch the surface, or any way for the edges to receive damage. That's why these are perfect for those looking to open cards in the best condition possible! THESE SETS ARE OF INVESTMENT GRADE QUALITY AND PROVIDE THE BEST |