to be fair, the eldrazi basically live in the space between planes and they only show up on a plane when they're hungry, they're more like planesmunchers
Can confirm. Everybody thinks that Kaito's spark ignited when he made contact with the kami of the spark, but it was actually just a plate of bad sushi he had for lunch. We know the truth
The three Eldrazi never planeswalked. The "kozilek", "ulamog" and "emrakul" you know are just an avatar used as a pawn for the real thing to control. All three of them never left the blind eternities
So wait a minute... If players are Planeswalkers and can deck-out, is removing a summoned Planeswalker from play in my opponent's next turn a legal move?
to be fair, the eldrazi basically live in the space between planes and they only show up on a plane when they're hungry, they're more like planesmunchers
What about creatures with Plainswalk, aren't those also the so called "plainswalkers"?
My car is a plainswalker. It has spark and can go anywhere
Can confirm. Everybody thinks that Kaito's spark ignited when he made contact with the kami of the spark, but it was actually just a plate of bad sushi he had for lunch. We know the truth
This explaination is exactly as Richard Garfield intended.
Ob Nixus turned himself Into a demon later on. He used to be a mortal.
Every rule about Planeswalkers and the Multiverse apply every time, except for when they don't.
Today I learned all magic players have food poisoning
The three Eldrazi never planeswalked. The "kozilek", "ulamog" and "emrakul" you know are just an avatar used as a pawn for the real thing to control. All three of them never left the blind eternities
Obviously Planeswalkers are creatures with the basic-landwalk ability for Plains.
Walkers
I planeswalked to the plane of 'Walmart' once. It had a lot of 1/1 human tokens that frightened me so I planeswalked the plane of 'My Room'.
How to create Planewalker in 5 easy steps:
>make sure you are one in a million
This feels like he is explaining to Phyrexians why they need to compleat planeswalkers
"but planes fly "
So becoming a planeswalker is the same process as becoming a reverend mother in dune, got it
Thought this was a rhystic studies video for a good half second when I saw this
So wait a minute... If players are Planeswalkers and can deck-out, is removing a summoned Planeswalker from play in my opponent's next turn a legal move?
So, this may actually be the best explanation.