HubCommandersCardsDecksThemesKeywordsSetsArticles
Sign inSign up
Sign inSign up

Mythicwyrm is unofficial Fan Content permitted under the Fan Content Policy. Not approved/endorsed by Wizards of the Coast. Portions of the materials used are property of Wizards of the Coast. © Wizards of the Coast LLC.

AboutArticlesContactTermsPrivacyAffiliate Disclosurev0.1.0

© 2026 Mythicwyrm. All rights reserved.

Magus of the Moon
Price$4.71 – $7.09
Buy on TCGplayer

Magus of the Moon

{2}{R}

Creature — Human Wizard

Legal Salt 1.75Rank #3,078

Nonbasic lands are Mountains.

2/2

Why is this card good?

Wyrm hasn't broken down this card yet — check back soon.

Related cards

Wyrm hasn't mapped related cards for this one yet — check back soon.

Printings (6)

spgSpecial Guests · #125M$5.84Buy
sldSecret Lair Drop · #1761R$6.51Buy
plstThe List · #FUT-101R$5.22Buy
tsrTime Spiral Remastered · #175R$4.71Buy
imaIconic Masters · #138R$5.09Buy
futFuture Sight · #101R$7.09Buy

Rulings (5)

  • 2021-03-19

    If a nonbasic land has an ability that triggers "when" it enters the battlefield, it will lose that ability before it can trigger.

  • 2021-03-19

    If a nonbasic land has an ability that causes it to enter the battlefield tapped, it will lose that ability before it can apply. The same is also true of any other abilities that modify how a land enters the battlefield or apply "as" a land enters the battlefield, such as that of Vesuva or Cavern of Souls.

  • 2021-03-19

    Nonbasic lands lose any other land types and abilities they had. They gain the land type Mountain and gain the ability "{T}: Add {R}."

  • 2021-03-19

    Magus of the Moon doesn't affect names or supertypes. It won't turn any land into a basic land or remove the legendary supertype from a legendary land, and the lands won't be named "Mountain."

  • 2021-03-19

    If Magus of the Moon loses its abilities, it continues to turn nonbasic lands into Mountains. This is because effects that change subtypes are applied before considering effects that remove abilities, regardless of the order in which those effects started.

Discussion (0)